Tuesday, July 8, 2025

New Issue: International Review of the Red Cross

The latest issue of the International Review of the Red Cross (Vol. 107, no. 928, 2025) is out. The theme is: "The Military." Contents include:
  • Rigmor Argren, What militaries need to know about data protection and the right to digital privacy/private life
  • Andrew Bartles-Smith, Military chaplains and equivalent religious personnel under international humanitarian law
  • Kevin Coble & John C. Tramazzo, A US perspective on special operations and the law of armed conflict
  • Davide Giovannelli, Handling cyberspace's state of intermediacy through existing international law
  • Nobuo Hayashi, The pseudo-kindness of wartime lawbreakers
  • Denise Koecke, Merging man and machine: A legal assessment of brain–computer interfaces in armed conflict
  • G. Blair Kuplic & Jonathan Sawmiller, Humanity on the final frontier: Challenges in applying international humanitarian law to modern military space operations
  • Ido Rosenzweig & Magdalena Pacholska, The use of facial recognition for targeting under international law
  • Noel Maurer Trew, This is who we are: The role of military ethics, culture, and religion in disseminating international humanitarian law to the armed forces
  • Loren Voss, The overlooked importance of intelligence analysis in IHL
  • Emily Bobenrieth & Sean Watts, US military legal doctrine and the emerging wartime cyber environment
  • Samuel White, War without limits: How sharp war theory is a historical anomaly
  • Safaa Jaber, Case note: The International Court of Justice’s 2022 reparations judgment in DRC v. Uganda
  • Charlotte Mohr, Honest Errors? Combat Decision-Making 75 Years after the Hostage Case Edited by Nobuo Hayashi and Carola Lingaas
  • Philippe Jacques, Equality of belligerents between States and armed groups: Proposal for a new definition of the principle of equality in non-international armed conflicts
  • Andrea Raab-Gray & Massimo Marelli, Inviolability in the digital era: The ICRC’s Agreement on Privileges and Immunities with Luxembourg