How laws are created, shaped, and applied is a significant but often overlooked component of studies on armed conflict. Almost every contentious legal question involves aspects of law-making and shaping, be it the determination of a rule's scope of application, whether and how to regulate a new situation, or determining which sources and materials to take into account. As such, all who operate in this space - whether academic, practitioner, policy-maker, or legal advisor - must appreciate and understand the forces, factors, and actors which converge to make and shape the ever-developing law of armed conflict. This volume brings together several key contributors to explore this making and shaping in depth. A variety of aspects of law-making and shaping are analyzed, from the methodology behind identifying principles and rules of law, to what weight should be given to the views of particular actors, to the various forums where the law is made and shaped. It examines foundational materials of the law of armed conflict including the 1949 Geneva Conventions and considers the influence of a wide scope of actors, ranging from States, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and international courts and tribunals through to expert groups, commissions of inquiry, and non-state armed groups. This volume also asks us to broaden our gaze beyond spaces where the law is traditionally created to uncover different types of making and unmaking
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Will deliver when available. Publication date 04 Nov 2024
Product Details
Weight: 699g
Dimensions: 164 x 239mm
Publication Date: 24 Jul 2024
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780197775134
About
Sandesh Sivakumaranis Professor of International Law at the University of Cambridge Director of the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law and Fellow of St Edmund's College Cambridge. He was the 2022 Lieber Scholar at the Lieber Institute for Law and Warfare United States Military Academy (West Point). He is the author of numerous works including The Law of Non-International Armed Conflict/R(2012). Captain Christian R. Burneis a United States Army Judge Advocate and an Assistant Professor of Law in the Department of Law at the United States Military Academy West Point New York. Previously he served as a Trial Counsel and Operational Law Attorney with XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort Bragg (now Fort Liberty) North Carolina. He earned a B.S. from the University of Scranton and a J.D. from the Pennsylvania State University Dickinson School of Law.