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Conduct of hostilities
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Conduct of hostilities

Photo illustration for section conduct of hostilities. ICRC ref. ru-d-00008-11

International law on the conduct of hostilities regulates and limits the methods and means of warfare used by parties to an armed conflict. It aims to strike a balance between legitimate military action and the humanitarian objective of reducing human suffering, particularly among civilians. Read full overview

Selected Topics

  • Methods and means of warfare

    International law restricts the methods and means used in war, limiting types of weapons, how they are used and soldiers’ conduct. A distinction must always be made between legitimate military targets and civilians.


  • Cultural property

    The protection of cultural property during armed conflict is based on the principle that damage to the cultural property of any people means, in the words of the 1954 Hague Convention, “damage to the cultural heritage of all mankind”.


  • War and the natural environment

    International humanitarian law aims to protect the civilian population during armed conflict and to ensure its survival. As a result, it also seeks to protect the natural environment without which human life is impossible.


Analysis

  • Reviewing the legality of new weapons, means and methods of warfare

    Parties to an armed conflict are limited in their choice of weapons, means and methods of warfare by the rules of international humanitarian law (IHL) governing the conduct of hostilities. This article goes back to the relevant rules.

    31-12-2006 | International Review of the Red Cross | Kathleen Lawand

  • Precautions under the law governing the conduct of hostilities

    This article presents a descriptive analysis of the precautions that are required of all belligerents in order to ensure the protection of civilian populations and objects against the effects of hostilities.

    31-12-2006 | International Review of the Red Cross | Jean-Francois Queguiner

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