The Ambiguous Protection of Schools Under the Law of War

This article considers whether the law of war provides school buildings with a less privileged status than it gives to hospitals and religious buildings. It proposes that three critical issues necessarily affect any legal regime that seeks to establish privileged status for a specific type of building during war: 1) defining which buildings qualify; 2) ensuring maintenance of privileged status by prohibiting their military use; and 3) ensuring their recognition by armed forces. It proposes that the law of war should adopt for schools a modern privilege that answers the above three issues. It asserts that school buildings have an inherent value to society that merits independent protection.

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Tipo de Recurso

Journal Article

Publicado

Publicado por

Georgetown Journal of International Law

Criado por

Gregory Raymond Bart

Tema(s)

Protection