IRRC No. 859

Means of warfare

12 articles

IRRC No. 859 Means of warfare

12 articles

Weapons are an integral feature of every armed conflict and conventional weapons will always remain the arms the most used. However, the proliferation of nuclear weapons and the potential misuse of advances in life sciences are also working their way up the security agenda. The present edition of the International Review of the Red Cross illustrates some aspects related to humanitarian law and humanitarian action.

Table of contents

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Editorial: Means of warfare

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Interview with Terence Taylor

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Targeting the city: Debates and silences about the aerial bombing of World War II

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Precision attack and international humanitarian law

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Complicity and beyond: International law and the transfer of small arms and light weapons

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Use of nuclear and radiological weapons by terrorists?

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The International Committee of the Red Cross and nuclear weapons: From Hiroshima to the dawn of the 21st century

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The meaning of Moscow: "Non-lethal" weapons and international law in the early 21st century

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Neurobiology: A case study of the imminent militarization of biology

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Model law: the Biological and Toxin Weapons Crimes Act

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National implementation of international humanitarian law – Biannual update, January to June 2005

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Books and articles (Autumn 2005)