From jus in bello to jus post bellum: when do non-international armed conflicts end?

Authors
Publication date 2014
Host editors
  • C. Stahn
  • J.S. Easterday
  • J. Iverson
Book title Jus post bellum: mapping the normative foundations
ISBN
  • 9780199685899
Pages (from-to) 297-314
Publisher Oxford: Oxford University Press
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Amsterdam Center for International Law (ACIL)
Abstract
This chapter discusses how to identify the moment when the law dealing with situations of armed conflict (jus in bello or international humanitarian law) ceases to apply and makes way for the law governing the period after the conflict ends. Neither the end of non-international armed conflicts nor the end of the temporal scope of international humanitarian law is defined in treaty law. This chapter proposes using the criteria and identifying factors for the lower threshold at the start of non-international armed conflicts to determine when such conflicts end and when international humanitarian law no longer applies. The chapter describes the challenges in using these criteria and factors, and sets out a modified framework that can serve to identify when the fighting between the parties to the conflict drops below the threshold of intensity and organization and when it thus ceases to be a non-international armed conflict.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199685899.003.0017
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