|
|
Featured Analysis
|
Arab-Israeli Conflict and the Laws of War
Interviews by Mark Dennis
The current clashes between Israelis and Palestinians have refocused world attention on a conflict many had hoped was nearing resolution. There is no shortage of news stories from the region, but the reports of pitched battles and political proclamations rarely address crucial points of international law.
|
|
|
|
The Pinochet Precedent: Who Could be Arrested Next?
Interviews by Marguerite Feitlowitz
Human rights experts roundly agree that Augusto Pinochet's 1998 arrest in London has made for a "new moment," a "turning point," "a whole new calculus for transnational justice." Yet the climate remains volatile, marked by unprecedented legal advances as well as dramatic setbacks.
Chechnya and the Laws of War
This survey addresses the question of whether the war in Chechnya is an internal armed conflict governed by international humanitarian law.
|
|
Archives
|
|
© Crimes of War Project 1999-2001
Crimes of War Project, American University (MGC-300) 4400 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington D.C. 20016-8017
Tel. 202.885.2051 Fax 202.885.8337 www.crimesofwar.org Site powered by iapps
|
|