International Law Studies
- Introduction
- Precision Air Warfare and the Law of Armed Conflict
- International Law and Cyber Threats from Non-State Actors
- VIII. The Laws of War in the War on Terror
- Asymmetric Warfare: How to Respond?
- Interoperability and the Atlantic Divide: A Bridge over Troubled Waters
- Challenges of Strategic Communication
- XXV. International Law and the War on Terrorism: The Road Ahead
- International Law and the 2003 Campaign against Iraq
- Cyber Operations and the Jus in Bello: Key Issues
- Who May Be Held? Military Detention through the Habeas Lens
- The International Legal Framework for Stability Operations: When May International Forces Attack or Detain Someone in Afghanistan?
- Coalition Operations: A Canadian Perspective
- Afghanistan: Hard Choices and the Future of International Law
- Direct Participation in Hostilities and the Interoperability of the Law of Armed Conflict and Human Rights Law
- Chemical Agents and 'Expanding' Bullets: Limited Law Enforcement Exceptions or Unwarranted Handcuffs?
- Defining Non-International Armed Conflict: A Historically Difficult Task
- Australian Defence Force Experience with Non-Government Organizations in Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief Operations
- Preface
- Index
- Keeping the Cyber Peace: International Legal Aspects of Cyber Activities in Peace Operations
- XIII. The Legality of Maritime Interception/Interdiction Operations Within the Framework of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM
- The International Legality of US Military Cross-Border Operations from Afghanistan into Pakistan
- Foreword
- Twenty- First-Century Challenges: The Use of Military Forces to Combat Criminal Threats
- Is There a 'New' Law of Intervention and Occupation?
- Regime Change and the Restoration of the Rule of Law in Iraq
- Special Forces' Wear of Non-Standard Uniforms
- IV. Commentary-Jus ad Bellum: Robert Turner
- Present and Future Conceptions of the Status of Government Forces in Non-International Armed Conflict
- The Unique and Protected Status of Hospital Ships under the Law of Armed Conflict
- Treatment and Interrogation of Detained Persons
- Classification of Cyber Conflict
- Geography of Armed Conflict: Why it is a Mistake to Fish for the Red Herring
- The Applicability of International Humanitarian Law and the Law of Neutrality to the Kosovo Campaign
- Cyber War and International Law: Does the International Legal Process Constitute a Threat to U.S. Vital Interests?
- Preface
- Making the Case for Conflict Bifurcation in Afghanistan: Transnational Armed Conflict, al Qaida and the Limits of the Associated Militia Concept
- Modern Weaponry and Warfare: The Application of Article 36 of Additional Protocol I by Governments
- Future Navies-Present Issues
- Iraq and the 'Fog of Law'
- Law of War Issues in Ground Hostilities in Afghanistan
- Commentary: Harvey Dalton
- Appendix: Contributors
- Military Commissions: Old Laws for New Wars
- Foreword
- Cyber Attacks as 'Force' under UN Charter Article 2(4)
- Final Report to the Prosecutor by the Committee Established to Review the NATO Bombing Campaign Against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
- The Law of Armed Conflict and the War on Terrorism
- XXI. Terrorism: The Proper Law and the Proper Forum?
- Legal Considerations in Relation to Maritime Operations against Iraq
- Blue Books
- Threats from the Global Commons: Problems of Jurisdiction and Enforcement
- XXIII. Commentary-Terrorism and the Problem of Different Legal Regimes: Daniel Helle
- The Occupation of Iraq
- Introduction - Scott Silliman
- Coalition Operations: A Compromise or an Accommodation
- The Dark Sides of Convergence: A Pro-civilian Critique of the Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights Law in Armed Conflict
- Military Commissions-Kangaroo Courts?
- Index
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Maritime Domain Awareness: The Key to Maritime Security
- Commentary: Wolff H. von Heinegg
- The Legal Efficacy of Freedom of Navigation Assertions
- Concluding Remarks: LOAC and Attempts to Abuse or Subvert It
- Arctic Climate Change and U.S. Accession to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
- Low-Intensity Computer Network Attack and Self-Defense
- Domestic Security and Maintenance of Liberty: Striking the Balance
- XXXII. Discussion-The Road Ahead
- Issues Arising from Coalition Operations: An Operational Lawyer's Perspective
- Military Activities in the Exclusive Economic Zone: Preventing Uncertainty and Defusing Conflict
- Commentary: Judith A. Miller
- Appendix-Contributors
- Starting from Here
- Combatants
- The Role of Counterterrorism Law in Shaping ad Bellum Norms for Cyber Warfare
- International Humanitarian Law after Kosovo: Is Lex Lata Sufficient?
- Toward 2015, Challenges for a Medium Navy: An Australian Perspective
- The 'Fog of Law': The Law of Armed Conflict in Operation Iraqi Freedom
- Differences in the Law of Weaponry When Applied to Non-International Armed Conflicts
- Foreword
- Global Armed Conflict? The Threshold of Extraterritorial Non-International Armed Conflicts
- Appendix: Contributors
- XIV. The Limits of Coalition Cooperation in the War on Terrorism
- The Influence of Law on Sea Power Doctrines: The New Maritime Strategy and the Future of the Global Legal Order
- XXVII. Commentary-The Road Ahead in Afghanistan: James Terry
- Study on Customary International Humanitarian Law: A Contribution to the Understanding and Respect for the Rule of Law in Armed Conflict
- Detention of Terrorists in the Twenty-first Century
- Propositions on the Law of War after the Kosovo Campaign
- Index
- Encroachment on Navigational Freedoms
- Discussion
- The Right of Self-Defense in the Global Fight against Terrorism
- Query: Is There a Status of 'Unlawful Combatant'?
- Legal Pespective from the EUCOM Targeting Cell
- The Law of Armed Conflict and Detention Operations in Afghanistan
- Distinction and Loss of Civilian Protection in International Armed Conflicts
- VI. Discussion-Jus ad Bellum
- Commentary: Harvey Dalton
- Cyber Warfare: Implications for Non-international Armed Conflicts
- Foreword
- Come the Revolution: A Legal Perspective on Air Operations in Iraq since 2003
- Targeting and Humanitarian Law: Current Issues
- XVIII. Commentary-Maritime and Coalition Operations: Jean-Guy Perron
- XIX. Discussion-Maritime and Coalition Operations
- Introduction
- Index
- Afghanistan and the Nature of Conflict
- Index
- Cyber War and International Law: Concluding Remarks at the 2012 Naval War College International Law Conference
- Blue Books
- Commentary: Rein Milllerson
- Preface
- V. Commentary-jus ad Bellum: William Dalton
- European and German Security Policy and International Terrorism
- Discussion
- Preface
- Introduction
- Lawfare Today...and Tomorrow
- The Age of Lawfare
- The Occupation of Iraq: A Reassessment
- International Humanitarian Law: Should It Be Reaffirmed, Clarified or Developed?
- Current Issues in Occupation Law: 2003 Civilian Deaths in Baghdad
- Preface
- Combating Terrorists: Legal Challenges in the Post-9/11 World
- XII. Discussion-Jus in Bello
- Teaching the Law of Armed Conflict to Armed Forces: Personal Reflections
- Appendix: Contributors
- Charting the Legal Geography of Non-International Armed Conflict
- The Changing Character of the Participants in War: Civilianization of Warfighting and the Concept of 'Direct Participation in Hostilities
- Command of the Commons Boasts: An Invitation to Lawfare?
- IX. Commentary-Jus in Bello: Charles Garraway
- The Proliferation Security Initiative: Security vs. Freedom of Navigation?
- Mission Impossible? International Law and the Changing Character of War
- Belligerent Targeting and the Invalidity of a Least Harmful Means Rule
- Commentary: Leslie C. Green
- Jus ad Pacem in Bello? Afghanistan, Stability Operations and the International Laws Relating to Armed Conflict
- Was the 2003 Invasion of Iraq Legal?
- US Detention of Taliban Fighters: Some Legal Considerations
- Foreword
- Organizing for Cyberspace Operations: Selected Issues
- Targeting
- Coalition Warfare and Differing Legal Obligations of Coalition Members Under International Humanitarian Law
- Discussion
- Air Power, Accuracy, and the Law of Targeting: Why No Brave New World?
- Introduction
- Foreword
- XI. Commentary-Jus in Bello: Tony Montgomery
- Security in the Strait of Malacca and the Regional Maritime Security Initiative: Responses to the US Proposal
- Foreword
- Coalition Warfare: Challenges and Opportunities
- Legal and Tactical Dilemmas Inherent in Fighting Terror: Experience of the Israeli Army in Jenin and Bethlehem (April-May 2002)
- The Law of Armed Conflict in Asymmetric Urban Armed Conflict
- Appendix: Contributors
- Concluding Remarks on Non-International Armed Conflicts
- Self-defensive Force against Cyber Attacks: Legal, Strategic and Political Dimensions
- Commentary: Yves Sandoz
- Index
- Limits on the Use of Force in Maritime Operations in Support of WMD Counter-Proliferation Initiatives
- The Laws of War After Kosovo
- Commentary: David Graham
- Discussion
- Perfidy in Non-International Armed Conflicts
- Contributors
- The Role of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Stability Operations
- Judging Kosovo: The Legal Process, the Law of Armed Conflict, and the Commander In Chief
- The Gulf War: 1990-2004 (And Still Counting)
- PREFACE
- Commentary: Henry Shue
- Some Legal (And A Few Ethical) Dimensions of the Collateral Damage Resulting from Nato's Kosovo Campaign
- Strategic Targeting and International Law: The Ambiguity of Law Meets the Reality of a Single-Superpower World
- XXVI. Al Qaeda And Taliban Detainees-An Examination of Legal Rights and Appropriate Treatment
- XXIV. Discussion-Bringing Terrorists to Justice
- Small Wars': The Legal Challenges
- An Australian Perspective on Non-International Armed Conflict: Afghanistan and East Timor
- The American Red Cross and International Humanitarian Law Dissemination
- Conflicts between United Nations Security Council Resolutions and the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and Their Possible Resolution
- Introduction
- To What Extent Is Protocol I Customary International Law?
- Operation Allied Force from the Perspective of the NATO Air Commander - Lieutenant General Michael Short, USAF (Ret)
- Debating the Issues
- Preemption by Armed Force of Trans-boundary Terrorist Threats: The Russian Perspective
- Autonomous Weapons and International Humanitarian Law: Advantages, Open Technical Questions and Legal Issues to be Clarified
- II. Counter-Terrorism and the Use of Force in International Law
- Using Force Lawfully in the 21st Century
- Contributors
- Rule of Law Capacity Building in Iraq
- The Treatment of Detainees and the 'Global War on Terror': Selected Legal Issues
- Preface
- Introduction
- Warning Civilians Prior to Attack under International Law: Theory and Practice
- Afghanistan and International Security
- Legitimate Military Objectives Under the Current Jus In Bello
- Liberation and Occupation: A Commander's Perspective
- Foreword
- Introduction
- An Australian Perspective on the ICRC Customary International Humanitarian Law Study
- Discussion
- Disaster Response: Key Legal Issues for US Northern Command