- Bruno Demeyere, Emerging voices: Increasing the diversity of voices featured in the International Review of the Red Cross
- Alessandro Mario Amoroso, Closer to home: How national implementation affects State conduct in partnered operations
- Victoria Arnal, Destructive trends in contemporary armed conflicts and the overlooked aspect of intangible cultural heritage: A critical comparison of the protection of cultural heritage under IHL and the Islamic law of armed conflict
- Annabel Bassil, Armed escorts to humanitarian convoys: An unexplored framework under international humanitarian law
- Thibaud de La Bourdonnaye, Greener insurgencies? Engaging non-State armed groups for the protection of the natural environment during non-international armed conflicts
- Issa Cristina Hernández Herrera, Collaborating with organized crime in the search for disappeared persons? Formalizing a humanitarian alternative for Mexico
- Won Jang, For whom the bell of proportionality tolls: Three proposals for strengthening proportionality compliance
- Eian Katz, Liar's war: Protecting civilians from disinformation during armed conflict
- Maxime Nijs, Humanizing siege warfare: Applying the principle of proportionality to sieges
- César Rojas-Orozco, The role of international humanitarian law in the search for peace: Lessons from Colombia
- Mayra Nuñez Pastor, Behind the legal curtain: Social, cultural and religious practices and their impact on missing persons and the dead in Colombia
- Fernanda García Pinto, The International Committee of the Red Cross and the International Criminal Court: Turning international humanitarian law into a two-headed snake?
- Vaughn Rossouw, “Or any other similar criteria”: Towards advancing the protection of LGBTQI detainees against discrimination and sexual and gender-based violence during non-international armed conflict
- Yugichha Sangroula, Investigating the Jana Adalat of the 1996–2006 armed conflict in Nepal
- Claire Simmons, Whose perception of justice? Real and perceived challenges to military investigations in armed conflict
- Rohan Talbot, Automating occupation: International humanitarian and human rights law implications of the deployment of facial recognition technologies in the occupied Palestinian territory
- Juliana Laguna Trujillo, A legal obligation under international law to guarantee access to abortion services in contexts of armed conflict? An analysis of the case of Colombia
- Tsvetelina van Benthem, The redirection of attacks by defending forces
- Ioanna Voudouri, Who is a civilian in Afghanistan?
- Paul Strauch & Beatrice Walton, Jus ex bello and international humanitarian law: States’ obligations when withdrawing from armed conflict
- Samuel White & Ray Kerkhove, Indigenous Australian laws of war: Makarrata, milwerangel and junkarti
Thursday, December 2, 2021
New Issue: International Review of the Red Cross
The latest issue of the International Review of the Red Cross (Vol. 102, no. 914, August 2020) is out. The theme is: "Emerging Voices." Contents include: