Monographie

To serve the enemy : informers, collaborators, and the laws of armed conflict / Shane Darcy

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  • Volume
  • To serve the enemy : informers, collaborators, and the laws of armed conflict / Shane Darcy
  • To Serve the Enemy Informers, Collaborators, and the Laws of Armed Conflict Shane Darcy 2019 Oxford Oxford University Press 978-0-19-183092-1
  • Oxford New York (N.Y.) : Oxford University press, 2019
  • 1 volume (XVIII-236 pages) ; 24 cm
  • Oxford monographs in international humanitarian and criminal law
  • 978-0-19-878889-8
  • 0-19-878889-4
  • 9780198788898 rel.
  • Oxford monographs in international humanitarian and criminal law [general editor Dr. Suzannah Linton,... and Salvatore Zappalà,...] Oxford Oxford university press 2012
  • 341.6
  • Titre provenant des métadonnées fournies par l'éditeur
  • Bibliogr. p. [219]-227. Index
  • History and practice of collaboration in armed conflict International humanitarian law on the recruitment and use of informers and collaborators Individual status under international humanitarian law Wartime trial and treatment of collaborators Human rights, national regulation, and armed conflict
  • Présentation de l'éditeur : "A constant yet oftentimes concealed practice in war has been the use of informers and collaborators by parties to an armed conflict. Despite the prevalence of such activity, and the serious and at times fatal consequences that befall those who collaborate with an enemy, international law applicable in times of armed conflict does not squarely address the phenomenon. The recruitment, use and treatment of informers and other collaborators is addressed only partially and at times indirectly by international humanitarian law. In this book, Shane Darcy examines the development and application of the relevant rules and principles of the laws of armed conflict in relation to collaboration. With a primary focus on international humanitarian law as may be applicable to various forms of collaboration, the book also offers an assessment of the relevance of human rights and considers how the phenomenon of collaboration has been addressed post-conflict."
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