
The latest issue of the
Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 17, no. 4, September 2019) is out. Contents include:
- Special Issue: Starvation in International Law
- Antonio Coco, Jérôme de Hemptinne, & Brian Lander, Foreword: Special Issue on Starvation in International Law
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Brian Lander & Rebecca Vetharaniam Richards, Addressing Hunger and Starvation in Situations of Armed Conflict — Laying the Foundations for Peace
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Bridget Conley & Alex de Waal, The Purposes of Starvation: Historical and Contemporary Uses
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Simone Hutter, Starvation in Armed Conflicts: An Analysis Based on the Right to Food
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Dapo Akande & Emanuela-Chiara Gillard, Conflict-induced Food Insecurity and the War Crime of Starvation of Civilians as a Method of Warfare: The Underlying Rules of International Humanitarian Law
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Manuel J Ventura, Prosecuting Starvation under International Criminal Law: Exploring the Legal Possibilities
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Federica D’Alessandra & Matthew Gillett, The War Crime of Starvation in Non-International Armed Conflict
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Wayne Jordash, Catriona Murdoch, & Joe Holmes, Strategies for Prosecuting Mass Starvation
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Salvatore Zappalà, Conflict Related Hunger, ‘Starvation Crimes’ and UN Security Council Resolution 2417 (2018)
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‘It is necessary that those who are responsible for these famines fear that they could be prosecuted for their crimes’: An interview with Jane Ferguson
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Antonio Coco, Jérôme de Hemptinne, & Brian Lander, International Law Against Starvation in Armed Conflict: Epilogue to a Multi-faceted Study