Crimes of War: What the Public Should KnowRoy Gutman, David Rieff, Kenneth Anderson W. W. Norton & Company, 1999 - 399 páginas For everyone who wants to become better informed about the news, this book lays out the benchmarks for monitoring the watchdogs and governments. Published to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Geneva Conventions, it illustrates what is legal in war and what is not. |
Contenido
TABLE | 11 |
D00 Compelling Military Service | 57 |
39 | 82 |
43 | 88 |
50 | 98 |
Dead and Wounded | 115 |
Genocide | 153 |
23 Deportation Roy Gutman | 165 |
Irregulars Ewen Allison and 258 NATO and the Geneva | 260 |
Levée en Masse Karma Nabulsi Gwynne Roberts | 299 |
RwandaThe Genocide | 312 |
Safety Zones Adam Roberts | 319 |
Sick and Wounded Eric Stover | 334 |
Soldiers Rights of Peter Rowe | 342 |
Terrorism against Civilians | 351 |
Acknowledgments | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Crimes of War: What the Public Should Know Roy Gutman,David Rieff,Kenneth Anderson Vista de fragmentos - 1999 |
Crimes of War: What the Public Should Know Roy Gutman,David Rieff,Kenneth Anderson Sin vista previa disponible - 1999 |
Términos y frases comunes
1977 Additional Protocol acts Arab armed forces army Article atrocities belligerent bombing Bosnian Serb Cambodia Chechen chemical weapons civil defense civilian objects civilian population combatants commander committed Conventions of 1949 crimes against humanity customary law death destruction enemy ethnic cleansing fighters fighting former Yugoslavia Fourth Geneva Convention genocide grave breaches groups Grozny guerrillas Gulf War Hague hospital hostilities human rights ICRC illegal indiscriminate attack internal armed conflict internal conflicts International Committee International Criminal Court international humanitarian law international law Iraq Iraqi Israel Israeli journalists Khmer Rouge killed laws of armed laws of war military objectives military targets Muslims noncombatants Nuremberg Palestinian paramilitaries parties persons political POWs prisoners prohibited protection Protocol II punishment rape Red Cross ICRC refugees rules Russian Rwanda Sarajevo soldiers terror thousand tion torture town treaty Tribunal troops Tutsis United Nations victims Vietnam Vietnamese villages violations war crimes warfare wounded