The latest volume of the Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law (vol. 18, 2015) is out.
Part I. CONTEMPORARY ARMED CONFLICTS AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW
1. Jose Serralvo, Government Recognition and International Humanitarian Law Applicability in Post-Gaddafi Libya
2. Bogdan Ivanel, Puppet States: A Growing Trend of Covert Occupation
3. Carrie A. Comer, Daniel M. Mburu, Humanitarian Law at Wits’ End: Does the Violence Arising from the “War on Drugs” in Mexico Meet the International Criminal Court’s Non-International Armed Conflict Threshold?
4. Noam Zamir, The Armed Conflict(s) Against the Islamic State
5. Annyssa Bellal, Beyond the Pale? Engaging the Islamic State on International Humanitarian Law
6. Elad David Gil, Trapped: Three Dilemmas in the Law of Proportionality and Asymmetric Warfare
7. Ezequiel Heffes, Generating Respect for International Humanitarian Law: The Establishment of Courts by Organized Non-State Armed Groups in Light of the Principle of Equality of Belligerents
Part II. OTHER ARTICLES
8. Clare Frances Moran, Defences for War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity? Duress and the Rome StatuteTable of Cases
9. Bérénice Boutin, Kate Pitcher, Onur Güven, Year in Review 2015
Index
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