This book contributes to contemporary debates on the effectiveness of international humanitarian law (IHL) in regulating or prohibiting inhumane weapons, such as landmines.
Two treaties have emerged under IHL in response to the humanitarian scourge of landmines. However, despite a considerable body of related literature, clear understandings have not been established on the effectiveness of these international legal frameworks in meeting the challenges that prompted their creation.
This book seeks to address this lacuna. An analytical framework grounded in regime theory helps move beyond the limitations in the current literature through a structured focus on principles, norms, rules, procedures, actors and issue areas. On the one hand, this clarifies how political considerations determine opportunities and constraints in designing and implementing IHL regimes. On the other, it enables us to explore how and why ‘ideal’ policy prescriptions are threatened when faced with complex challenges in post-conflict contexts.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Bryden: International Law, Politics and Inhumane Weapons: The effectiveness of global landmine regimes
Alan Bryden (Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces) has published International Law, Politics and Inhumane Weapons: The effectiveness of global landmine regimes (Routledge 2012). Here's the abstract: