Monday, January 20, 2025

New Issue: International Review of the Red Cross

The latest issue of the International Review of the Red Cross (Vol. 106, no. 926, 2024) is out. Contents include:
  • Julien Antouly, Vincent Leger, Camille Raillon, & Virginie Troit, The challenges of research in the humanitarian sector: An evolving relationship
  • Raj Balkaran & A. Walter Dorn, Exploring Hindu ethics of warfare: The Purāṇas
  • Christian Via Balole & Raphaël van Steenberghe, Enhanced labour protection for prisoners of war
  • Sultan Barakat, Niche small States in humanitarian diplomacy: Qatar's positionality in the protection ecosystem
  • Hugo Cahueñas Muñoz & Juan Felipe Idrovo Romo, Is Ecuador facing a non-international armed conflict against organized crime groups? Reality, inconsistencies and jurisprudential developments
  • Darlington Tshuma, African customs and traditions and the indigenization of international humanitarian law in armed conflict
  • Ignacio de la Rasilla, “The Spanish Henri Dunant” of the Institut de Droit International, Nicasio Landa (1830–1891)
  • Chris Dolan, Lucy Hovil, & Laura Pasquero, Translating survivor-centredness into pedagogical approaches to training on sexual violence in conflict and emergency settings: A case study
  • Daniel C. Hinck, Jonas J. Schöttler, Maria Krantz, Niklas Widulle, Katharina-Sophie Isleif, & Oliver Niggemann, A next-generation protective emblem: Cross-frequency protective options for non-combatants in the context of (fully) autonomous warfare
  • Jonathan Kwik, Is wearing these sunglasses an attack? Obligations under IHL related to anti-AI countermeasures
  • Edward Madziwa, Advancing honour and dignity in death for victims of armed conflicts: Exploring the challenges and opportunities of AI and machine learning in humanitarian forensic action under IHL
  • Maria Dolores Morcillo Mendez, Strengthening the medicolegal system: Fulfilling international law obligations during conflicts and disasters to prevent and resolve issues of humanitarian concern
  • Bailey Ulbricht & Joelle Rizk, How harmful information on social media impacts people affected by armed conflict: A typology of harms
  • Ido Rosenzweig, “When you have to shoot, shoot!” Rethinking the right to life of combatants during armed conflicts
  • Mina Radončić & Ashley Stanley-Ryan, Pro patria mori: When States encourage civilian involvement in armed conflict
  • Sylvain Vité & Isabelle Gallino, Decentralized armed groups: Can they be classified as parties to non-international armed conflicts?
  • Charlotte Mohr, Civility, Barbarism, and the Evolution of International Humanitarian Law: Who Do the Laws of War Protect? Edited by Matt Killingsworth and Tim McCormack
  • George Dvaladze, Equality and Non-Discrimination in Armed Conflict: Humanitarian and Human Rights Law in Practice