
Over the past twenty-five years, significant changes in the conduct of wars have increasingly placed civilians in traditional military roles - employing civilians to execute drone strikes, the 'targeted killing' of suspected terrorists, the use of private security contractors in combat zones, and the spread of cyber attacks. Under the laws of armed conflict, civilians cannot be targeted unless they take direct part in hostilities. Once civilians take action, they become targets. This book analyses the complex question of how to identify just who those civilians are. Identifying the Enemy examines the history of civilian participation in armed conflict and how the law has responded to such action. It asks the crucial question: what is 'direct participation in hostilities'? The book slices through the attempts to untie this Gordian knot, and shows that the changing nature of warfare has called into question the very foundation of the civilian/military dichotomy that is at the heart of the law of armed conflict.
This book investigates the legal and ethical challenges of defining 'direct participation in hostilities' by civilians in modern armed conflicts. Emily Crawford, a legal scholar specializing in international humanitarian law, examines how the blurring lines between military personnel and civilians—exacerbated by drone warfare, private contractors, and cyber operations—undermine traditional legal frameworks. The text argues that the foundational civilian/military dichotomy is increasingly inadequate for addressing the realities of contemporary asymmetric warfare.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners identify this work as a critical examination of the evolving status of non-combatants in modern war. The text is frequently cited for its rigorous analysis of the challenges posed by the changing nature of military engagement.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191667943
ISBN-13:
9780191667947
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