Identifying the Enemy: Civilian Participation in Armed Conflict

Similar documents
DIRECT PARTICIPATION IN HOSTILITIES

Overview of the ICRC's Expert Process ( )

Targeting People: Direct Participation in the Conduct of Hostilities DR. GENTIAN ZYBERI NORWEGIAN CENTRE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS UNIVERSITY OF OSLO

A Necessary Discussion About International Law

THE ICRC'S CLARIFICATION PROCESS ON THE NOTION OF DIRECT PARTICIPATION IN HOSTILITIES UNDER INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW NILS MELZER

Compliant Rebels: Rebel Groups and International Law in World Politics

D R A F T. Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities

PART 1 : RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ICRC PART 2 : RECOMMENDATIONS AND COMMENTARY

PRIVATE MILITARY AND SECURITY COMPANIES 35 th Round Table on Current Issues of International Humanitarian Law San Remo, 6-8 September 2012

Property Law Part IV. Tibisay Morgandi. Research Block Four

UNITED NATIONS OFFICE OF LEGAL AFFAIRS

Welcome, Opening of Meeting, and Introduction of the President

Modified Objectives. Flight path preview. Conflict Classification (plus a little extra) Know the three categories of armed conflict

Sixty years of the Geneva Conventions: learning from the past to better face the future

The Harmonization Project: Improving Compliance with the Law of War in Non- International Armed Conflicts

Cordula Droege Legal adviser, ICRC

Fourth Expert Meeting on the Notion of. Direct Participation in Hostilities. Summary Report

Non-state actors and Direct Participation in Hostilities. Giulio Bartolini University of Roma Tre

Reviewing the legality of new weapons, means and methods of warfare

The University of Edinburgh. From the SelectedWorks of Ray Barquero. Ray Barquero, Mr., University of Edinburgh. Fall October, 2012

MARCO SASSÒLI & ANTOINE A. BOUVIER UN DROIT DANS LA GUERRE? (GENÈVE : COMITÉ INTERNATIONAL DE LA CROIX-ROUGE, 2003) By Natalie Wagner

Obligations of International Humanitarian Law

LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT

UNITED NATIONS OFFICE OF LEGAL AFFAIRS

Second Expert Meeting Direct Participation in Hostilities under International Humanitarian Law

The 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and the notion of military necessity by Jan Hladík

ILC The Environment in Armed Conflicts Draft Principles by Stavros-Evdokimos Pantazopoulos*

International humanitarian law and the protection of war victims

The Syrian Conflict and International Humanitarian Law

The Knight's Code, Not His Lance

30 YEARS FROM THE ADOPTION OF ADDITIONAL PROTOCOLS I AND II TO THE GENEVA CONVENTIONS

United Nations conference to negotiate a legally binding instrument to prohibit nuclear weapons, leading towards their total elimination

Counterterrorism strategies from an international law. and policy perspective

Consequences under International Humanitarian Law for Civilians Who Take a Direct Part in Hostilities

EU GUIDELINES on INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW

1. 4. Legal Framework for United Nations Peacekeeping. L e s s o n

INTERNATIONAL LAW COMMISSION Sixty-seventh session Geneva, 4 May 5 June and 6 July 7 August 2015 Check against delivery

INTERNATIONAL LAW AND INSTITUTIONS International Law Regarding the Conduct of War - Mark A. Drumbl INTERNATIONAL LAW REGARDING THE CONDUCT OF WAR

Third Expert Meeting on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities. Geneva, October Summary Report

MUCH PUBLIC debate has centred on the legality of unmanned aerial

PROGRAMME OF WORKSHOPS AND SIDE EVENTS TO BE HELD. 30 th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE DURING THE 30 TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE. 30IC/07 Original: English

THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN INTERNATIONAL AND NON-INTERNATIONAL ARMED CONFLICTS: CHALLENGES FOR IHL?

The Erik Castrén Institute of International Law and Human Rights doi: /ejil/chl040

OPPORTUNITY LOST: ORGANIZED ARMED GROUPS AND THE ICRC DIRECT PARTICIPATION IN HOSTILITIES INTERPRETIVE GUIDANCE

Protection of Civilians. Protecting Civilians in War: The ICRC, UNHCR, and Their Limitations in Internal Armed Conflicts COMPARATIVE BOOK REVIEW

Internment in Armed Conflict: Basic Rules and Challenges. International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Opinion Paper, November 2014

Establishment of National IHL Committee by High Contracting Party under Geneva Conventions of 1949: Case of Pakistan and the Islmic outlook

ANNEX I: APPLICABLE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FRAMEWORK

The legality of Targeted Killings in the War on Terror

Dear students: This presentation is a text version of the presentation that was given in lecture # 1, since presentations with certain animations

International Humanitarian Law

Transfer of the Civilian Population in International Law

1-2 November Session 2: Principles and Methods of Humanitarian Action

Legitimate Targets of Attack The Principles of Distinction and Proportionality in IHL

Implementation of International Humanitarian Law. Dr. Benarji Chakka Associate Professor

THE MARTENS CLAUSE AND INTERNATIONAL CRIMES IN ESTONIA

Towards a compliance-based approach to LAWS

Less-Lethal Weapons Legislation

Chapter 3: The Legal Framework

Explosive weapons in populated areas - key questions and answers

The Internet in Bello: Cyber War Law, Ethics & Policy Seminar held 18 November 2011, Berkeley Law

FACT SHEET STOPPING THE USE OF RAPE AS A TACTIC OF

Non-international Armed Conflicts (NIACs) and Combatant Status. Cecilie Hellestveit NCHR/UiO

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES

CHAPTER 1 BASIC RULES AND PRINCIPLES

The human rights implications of targeted killings. Christof Heyns, UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions

Review of the doctoral dissertation entitled

International Law Journal symposium on State Ethics, 20 February 2012, Harvard Law School

TOWARDS CONVERGENCE. IHL, IHRL and the Convergence of Norms in Armed Conflict

COUNCIL OF DELEGATES OF THE INTERNATIONAL RED CROSS AND RED CRESCENT MOVEMENT. International Humanitarian Law

THE RED CROSS AND THE GENEVA CONVENTIONS 60 YEARS ON

Appraising the Core Principles of International Humanitarian Law By Dr. Arinze Abuah

Recognition and secessionist in the complex environment of world politics

Setting a time limit: The case for a protocol on prolonged occupation

A compliance-based approach to Autonomous Weapon Systems

The Evolution of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) Understanding How Morals Have Changed War

Humanitarian Space: Concept, Definitions and Uses Meeting Summary Humanitarian Policy Group, Overseas Development Institute 20 th October 2010

PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT DURING ARMED CONFLICT UNDER INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW

Lesson 8 Legal Frameworks for Civil-Military-Police Relations

A Need for Greater Restrictions on the Use of Improvised Explosive Devices? A Food for thought paper

DEBATE FORUM. TARGETED KILLING AS A MEANS OF ASYMMETRIC WARFARE: A PROVOCATIVE VIEW AND INVITATION TO DEBATE Sascha Dominik Bachmann Ulf Haeussler

Bitkom views on EDPB Guidelines 3/2018 on the territorial scope of the GDPR (Article 3)

ICRC, International Humanitarian Law and the challenges of contemporary armed conflicts in 2015

CHALLENGES OF TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY CONFLICTS: A LOOK AT DIRECT PARTICIPATION IN HOSTILITIES

Published on How does law protect in war? - Online casebook ( Yemen

Power: A Radical View by Steven Lukes

International humanitarian law and the challenges of contemporary armed conflicts

REPORTS AND DOCUMENTS. Introduction : : : : : : :

***Unofficial Translation from Hebrew***

THE LAW OF LAND WARFARE

Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW)

INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE RED CROSS: INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW WORKSHOP

International Law Restricting Drone Use Is Part of the Law of the United States

BOOK REVIEW: WHY LA W MA TTERS BY ALON HAREL

HOSTILITIES UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW

Attacks on Medical Units in International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law

INTERNATIONAL LAW AND ANTI-PERSONNEL LANDMINES

Chapter 1 The Problem of Judicial Independence

UWA Law School UNIT DETAILS. The Law Relating to Conflict - Technology and Future Challenges. Credit points 6. Availability Available 2016

Background. Journalists. Committee to Protect Journalists

Transcription:

International Review of the Red Cross (2015), 97 (900), 1507 1511. The evolution of warfare doi:10.1017/s181638311600031x BOOK REVIEW Identifying the Enemy: Civilian Participation in Armed Conflict Emily Crawford* Book review by Ellen Policinski, JD, LLM, Thematic Editor, International Review of the Red Cross. Emily Crawford s 2015 book, Identifying the Enemy: Civilian Participation in Armed Conflict, is an examination of civilian involvement in armed conflict, with a focus on the development of international humanitarian law (IHL) relating to civilians direct participation in conflict. It puts the evolution of the law in the broader historical context from the birth of modern IHL to drone targeting and cyber-warfare. Dr Emily Crawford, of University of Sydney Law School, wrote her doctoral thesis on the disparate treatment of participants in armed conflict. 1 Identifying the Enemy grew out of a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Sydney aimed at exploring the way in which civilian participation in twenty-first-century armed conflict has created challenges for the traditional conceptualization of civilians and belligerents. 2 From the level of technical detail and the historical depth of the volume, it is clear that its intended audience are scholars who are interested in tracing major developments in the distinction between civilians and belligerents under international law, with a view to clarifying what constitutes direct participation in hostilities (DPH) by civilians. Identifying the Enemy is successful in its meticulously researched framing of the modern concept of DPH within its historical evolution, making a valuable * Published by Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2015. icrc 2016 1507

Book review contribution to the literature concerning civilian participation in hostilities (direct or otherwise) and examining how civilians taking part in the fight are perceived and identified by armed actors. Crawford s field of view in this discussion expands on the traditional understanding of civilians who engage in DPH to discuss how the international community has dealt with civilians who participate in hostilities, who she terms irregular combatants or irregulars. She aims to contextualize the contemporary understanding of which conduct results in a loss of civilians legal protection from attack by framing the question in light of legal developments over the course of modern history, reaching back to the 1800s and following the law s evolution up to today. The book is divided into three main parts, entitled The Development of the Law relating to Civilians and Armed Conflicts, Current Challenges to the Law on Civilians and Armed Conflict and Civilian Participation in Armed Conflict and the Law in the Twenty-First Century. Although it is sometimes easy to lose sight of the DPH forest through the trees of Crawford s in-depth analysis and rich historical references, overall the reader will find the book is structured in an accessible way. In outlining the development of the law, Crawford begins with the principle of distinction, a touchstone she comes back to time and again to remind the reader of its importance in regulating warfare. 3 Also threaded throughout the book are the historical sources Crawford cites, such as the 1868 St Petersburg declaration, 4 Grotius s seminal 1625 work The Law of War and Peace, 5 and Rousseau s The Social Contract. 6 Crawford is not unique in turning to historical and contemporary examples in examining the issue of civilian participation in hostilities, 7 but the breadth of her research is impressive. Putting the discussion in historical context gives an important sense of the evolution of thinking around civilians participating in conflict, and grounds Crawford s analysis solidly in the wealth of scholarly thought that has taken place on this topic. Crawford s first chapters use this deep historical analysis to examine how perceptions of civilian immunity from attack have evolved over time, finding patterns in an individual s ability to cause harm triggering their susceptibility to lawful attack and looking at the types of individuals that are protected from attack under different religious traditions. 8 She traces the international community s legislative responses to civilian participation in hostilities, as most 1 Emily Crawford, The Treatment of Combatants and Insurgents under the Law of Armed Conflict, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2010. 2 See Sydney Law School, Meet Our Expert Dr Emily Crawford, available at: http://sydney.edu.au/law/ research/our_experts/emily_crawford.shtml (all internet references were accessed in December 2015). 3 Identifying the Enemy, p. 12. 4 Ibid., p. 13. 5 Ibid., p. 20. 6 Ibid., pp. 21 22. 7 See, e.g., Hugo Slim, Killing Civilians: Method, Madness and Morality in War, C. Hurst & Co., London, 2007; Nicolette Boehland, The People s Perspectives: Civilian Involvement in Armed Conflict, Report, Center for Civilians in Conflict, Washington, DC, 2015, available at: http://civiliansinconflict.org/ uploads/files/peoples_perspectives_webfinal.pdf. 8 Identifying the Enemy, pp. 21 22. 1508

Identifying the Enemy: Civilian Participation in Armed Conflict IHL scholars do, back to the 1874 Lieber Code, 9 also discussing the 1874 Brussels Declaration 10 and the 1880 response by the Institute of International Law in the form of the Oxford Manual on the Laws of War on Land, 11 and the 1899 and 1907 Hague Regulations, 12 before reaching the 1949 Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols. 13 She looks at historical developments in treaty law, scholarly literature, State practice (via military manuals, codes of conduct, domestic laws and regulations etc.), the practice of international organizations and international tribunals, and soft-law instruments. Crawford s book does not include mention of the 2015 US Law of War Manual, which was published in the same year. 14 Since 2009, the ICRC s Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities (Interpretive Guidance) has been the principal text referenced in scholarly discussions of civilian participation in hostilities. 15 Crawford has included much discussion of this text in her book, but does not rely solely upon it, also looking to other sources such as State practice, international and national jurisprudence, and other interpretations of the law. She includes the most well-known criticisms of the Interpretive Guidance, notably the criticisms of Section IX on Restraints on the Use of Force in Direct Attack, as well as her own critical analysis of the text. She sees the Interpretive Guidance as the outer marker of a more narrow and restrictive approach to targeting persons directly participating in hostilities. 16 In determining whether a consensus on the definition of DPH can be found after examining these historical and modern-day interpretations of the concept, Crawford reaches a definition to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis: [I]f in light of circumstances ruling at the time, a person appears to be taking a direct part in hostilities, and that their actions are more than indirect (i.e., political support, provision of basic sustenance such as food or water) but are likely to cause actual harm to an enemy, one could feasibly maintain a charge of DPH. 17 Having established consensus only on this vague and exceedingly broad definition of the conduct that makes a civilian subject to lawful attack, in the second part of the book Crawford discusses how this lack of clarity plays out in light of several features of modern armed conflict: targeted killing, remote warfare (drones and cyberwarfare), private military and security contractors, and criminal activities in 9 Ibid., pp. 27 ff. 10 Ibid., pp. 30 ff. 11 Ibid., pp. 31 ff. 12 Ibid., pp. 32 ff. 13 Ibid., pp. 35 ff. 14 US Department of Defense, Law of War Manual, Office of General Counsel, Washington, DC, 12 June 2015, available at: www.dod.mil/dodgc/images/law_war_manual15.pdf. 15 Nils Melzer, Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities under International Humanitarian Law, ICRC, Geneva, 2009. 16 Identifying the Enemy, p. 88. 17 Ibid., p. 91. 1509

Book review armed conflict. A substantive critique that can be made here is that while these topics may be sexy at the moment, it is important to note that such new phenomena can be analyzed within the existing IHL framework to create consistency and predictability in the law. For example, targeted killing is not a new phenomenon, regardless of the relatively recent debate on drones as a weapons platform. The third and final part of the book argues that the way forward in dealing with increased civilian participation in armed conflict is through the development of soft-law instruments. 18 Crawford defines soft law broadly, as any non-binding instrument or set of instructions designed to either restate, affirm, develop, and/ or clarify the binding norms that regulate conduct in a particular area. 19 She cites numerous benefits of soft-law instruments in armed conflict, especially in non-international armed conflict. 20 Crawford points out that it is unclear whether soft law truly affects the behaviour of belligerents without more details and concrete data in this area. 21 She also acknowledges some of the drawbacks of soft law. She uses the ICRC s Interpretive Guidance as an example here, stating that it is a document issued by a well-respected and undoubted leader in IHL affairs, but one that came out of a process which was marked by dissent and disavowal by some of the participants. 22 Tainted, in Crawford s view, by disagreements among experts during the consultation process, the Interpretive Guidance suffers from the fact that any potential norm-influencing power that international law instruments may have will be limited by the degree to which the instruments are accepted by States, and incorporated into State practice. 23 One potential danger behind the author s call for further regulation of DPH through new soft-law instruments is the risk of opening up the protection offered to the civilian population to erosion by those who would seek to expand the interpretation of DPH. According to Crawford, the question of DPH might be best addressed through unconventional means, such as soft law instruments. 24 Given the dearth of new binding legal instruments at the international level, soft law certainly does seem an attractive option. However, the controversy that greeted the 2009 Interpretive Guidance, a key example of such soft law, shows that this solution may have its flaws. Crawford interestingly points to the possibility that such soft law could be a number of smaller, shorter, more specific documents on specific areas, rather than addressing DPH as a whole in the vein of the ICRC s Interpretive Guidance. 25 This may solve some of the controversies, although the 18 Ibid., p. 206. 19 Ibid., p. 212, citation omitted. 20 Ibid., pp. 212 216. 21 Ibid., pp. 217 225. 22 Ibid., pp. 226 227, citations omitted. 23 Ibid., pp. 227 228. 24 Ibid., p. 7. 25 Ibid., p. 229. 1510

Identifying the Enemy: Civilian Participation in Armed Conflict specific areas where States are likely to agree to such soft-law instruments may be those that are already accepted as norms. Crawford presents a strong case that it is worth considering how to better regulate the varied forms of civilian participation in hostilities under international law. In light of the deep and informative historical examination that underlies her analysis, this book presents a valuable perspective and is an interesting contribution to the literature on the topic. Given that the consequences for civilians who are directly participating or who are perceived as directly participating in hostilities can be lethal, one can only hope that there will be continued discussion leading to more consensus on when civilians lose their protection from direct attack. 1511