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- Title
Needs or Rights? Exploring the Limitations of Individual Reparations for Violations of International Humanitarian Law.
- Authors
Camins, Emily L.
- Abstract
International humanitarian law (IHL) is increasingly being invoked as a potential legal vehicle for individual claims to reparations, including compensation, postconflict. In this article, I explore the limitations of such an approach. In particular, I examine the distinctly pragmatic nature of IHL, which takes as its starting premise the existence of armed conflict and from this point seeks to attenuate the effects of conflict and address the suffering and needs of those caught up in it. Drawing largely on the work of Jean Pictet, I consider how a rights-based approach - which is founded primarily on legal constructs rather than the broader needs of victims of conflictfits with the conceptual framework of IHL. This exploration feeds into discussions on the role of rights in the context of transitional justice.
- Subjects
HUMANITARIAN law; RIGHTS; CRIMINAL reparations; MILITARY necessity; NECESSITY (International law)
- Publication
International Journal of Transitional Justice, 2016, Vol 10, Issue 1, p126
- ISSN
1752-7716
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/ijtj/ijv035