![]() The Oxford Handbook of International Law in Armed Conflict. Cullen 2010 and Moir 2002 examine the law of targeting in the context of a non-international armed conflict, while Sivakumaran 2012 presents the relevant practice of states and nonstate actors in situations of internal conflicts.Ĭlapham, Andrew, and Paola Gaeta, eds. Henckaerts and Doswald-Beck 2005 identifies the customary rules applicable to armed conflict including the rules governing targeting. Gill and Dieter 2012 explores the law that governs targeted killings, and Green 2008 examines the International Court of Justice, ICTY, and ICTR jurisprudence on targeting. Dinstein 2010 analyses military necessity in the context of targeting, as well as the categories of weapons that according to international law can be used in an armed conflict. D’Aspremont and De Hemptinne 2012 provides an overview of the law applicable to armed conflicts with targeting being considered under the principle of distinction, Fleck 2013 provides commentaries by scholars and practitioners on a wide range of topics relating to armed conflict including targeting whereas Clapham and Gaeta 2014 is a collection of essays on the multiple legal regimes that apply to armed conflicts. General works on international humanitarian law deal with the law of targeting and its attendant principles.
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