Foreword
Introduction
Part I
1: Understanding international human rights law
2: Identifying, defining, and classifying the activities of armed
forces
3: The extraterritorial applicability of international human rights
law
4: Relationship between international human rights law and the law
of armed conflict
Part II
5: Conduct of hostilities and targeting
6: Rules of Engagement
7: Weapons
8: Detention and prisoners of war
9: Protection of persons in the hands of the enemy
10: Occupation
11: Peace operations and other multinational operations
12: Humanitarian assistance activities
13: Air operations
14: Maritime warfare
15: Cyber warfare
16: Implementation of human rights law
Daragh Murray is a lecturer in the School of Law & Human Rights
Centre at the University of Essex. His research focuses on the law
of armed conflict, international human rights law, and the
relationship between the two. He has a particular interest in the
activities of non-State armed groups and has recently published a
monograph entitled Human Rights Obligations of non-State Armed
Groups.
Elizabeth Wilmshurst CMG is Associate Fellow, International Law, at
Chatham House, and a visiting professor at University College,
London University. She was a legal adviser in the United Kingdom
diplomatic service between 1974 and 2003. Between 1994 and 1997 she
was the Legal Adviser to the UK mission to the United Nations in
New York. She took part in the negotiations for the establishment
of the International Criminal Court. Her experience has been in
public international law generally, with
a particular emphasis on the use of force, international criminal
law, the law of the United Nations and its organs, consular and
diplomatic law, State and sovereign immunity, and international
humanitarian law.
Francoise Hampson is an Emeritus Professor at the University of
Essex. She was formerly an independent expert member of the UN
Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights from
1998-2007. She has acted as a consultant on humanitarian law to the
International Committee of the Red Cross and taught at Staff
Colleges or equivalents in the UK, USA, Canada & Ghana. She
represented Oxfam and SCF (UK) at the Preparatory Committee and
first session of the Review Conference for
the Certain Conventional Weapons Convention. Professor Hampson has
successfully litigated many cases before the European Court of
Human Rights in Strasbourg and, in recognition of her contribution
to the
development of law in this area, was awarded Human Rights Lawyer of
the Year jointly with her colleague from the Centre, Professor
Kevin Boyle. She has taught, researched and published widely in the
fields of armed conflict, international humanitarian law and on the
European Convention on Human Rights.
Charles Garraway is a Fellow at the University of Essex and an
Associate Fellow of Chatham House. He formerly served for thirty
years as a legal officer in the United Kingdom Army Legal Services,
initially as a criminal prosecutor but latterly as an adviser in
the law of armed conflict and operational law. In that capacity, he
represented the Ministry of Defence at numerous international
conferences and was part of the UK delegations to the First Review
Conference for the 1981 Conventional
Weapons Convention, the negotiations on the establishment of an
International Criminal Court, and the Diplomatic Conference that
led to the 1999 Second Protocol to the 1954 Hague Convention on
Cultural
Property. He was also the senior Army lawyer deployed to the Gulf
during the 1990/91 Gulf Conflict.
Noam Lubell is a Professor and Head of the School of Law at the
University of Essex. In past years he was a Lecturer at the Irish
Centre for Human Rights, National University of Ireland, Galway;
the Co-Director of the International Law Amicus Curiae Clinic at
the Concord Research Centre in Israel; and a Visiting Research
Fellow at the Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the
Advancement of Peace, at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. He has
taught courses on international human rights law and
the laws of armed conflict in a number of academic institutions,
including the University of Essex, the National University of
Ireland, the University of Oxford, the Geneva Academy, and as a
Visiting
Professor at Case Western Reserve University in the US. Professor
Lubell holds the Swiss Chair of International Humanitarian Law, at
the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human
Rights, and is the Rapporteur of the International Law
Association's Committee on the Use of Force.
Dapo Akande is Professor of Public International Law at the
University of Oxford. He is a Yamani Fellow at St Peters College at
the University of Oxford. He has held visiting professorships at
Yale Law School (where he was also Robinna Foundation International
Fellow), the University of Miami School of Law and the Catolica
Global Law School, Lisbon. Professor Akande has advised States,
international organizations and non-governmental organizations on
matters of international law.
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