Distinction (law)
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- Distinguishing Combatant Terrorists from Non-Combatant Terrorists in Modern Warfare Alexander Fraser University of Richmond
- Distinction Principle in International Humanitarian Law Related to Civilian Objects and Military Objects
- The Just Distribution of Harm Between Combatants And
- International Law Studies
- Extra-Territorial Use of Force, Civilian Casualties, and the Duty to Investigate
- Warriors Without Rights? Combatants, Unprivileged Belligerents, and the Struggle Over Legitimacy
- Collateral Damage David Lefkowitz University of Richmond, [email protected]
- Introduction to the Law of Armed Conflict (LOAC)
- Proportionality and Distinction in the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
- Two Sides of the Combatant Coin: Untangling Direct Participation in Hostilities from Belligerent Status in Non-International Armed Conflicts
- What Is International Humanitarian Law?
- Military Necessity and the Cultures of Military Law
- I. the Basic Principle of Distinction
- Civilian Casualties in Modern Warfare: the Death of the Collateral Damage Rule
- Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities
- Law of Armed Conflict Deskbook, 2015
- Detention of U.S. Persons As Enemy Belligerents
- Belligerent Targeting and the Invalidity of a Least Harmful Means Rule