Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, Volume 24 (2021): Cultures of International Humanitarian Law
In: Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law Series
Intro -- Editorial Board -- Editorial -- Contents -- Part I Cultures of IHL -- 1 Des-Encanto: Latin America and International Humanitarian Law -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Situating Latin America in the History of the Laws of War -- 1.3 Criollo Law of War -- 1.4 Litigating the Laws of War -- 1.5 The Disenchantment of Latin America -- 1.6 Conclusions -- References -- 2 Rites of Affirmation: The Past, Present, and Future of International Humanitarian Law -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Progress and Promise -- 2.3 An Immanent Cult -- 2.4 The Limits of History -- 2.5 The Uses of History -- 2.5.1 Exogenous Uses -- 2.5.2 Endogenous Uses -- 2.6 Coming to Terms with Anxiety: From History to Social Memory -- 2.6.1 Formalist Anxieties -- 2.6.2 Anxieties of Conscience/Consciousness -- 2.6.3 Vows Renewed, Promises Deferred -- 2.6.4 Histories of Deferment and Exculpation -- 2.6.5 Achievement, Anxiety and Misconception -- 2.7 Conclusion: Re-historicising the Laws of War -- References -- 3 Prisoners of War, Taking of Hostages and the Colombian Armed Conflict: Challenges Arising Out of Conflictive Understandings of IHL by Different Actors in Particular Contexts -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Detentions by Non-state Armed Groups in NIAC in the Light of IHL: Three Dimensions of the Same Phenomenon -- 3.2.1 The Impossibility to Automatically Transfer IHL Regulations for POW to NIACs -- 3.2.2 The IHL Regulation Over the Moment of Retention by Non-state Armed Groups -- 3.2.3 IHL Regulation on Conditions of Captivity by Non-state Armed Groups -- 3.2.4 IHL Regulation on Liberation of Persons Deprived of Their Physical Liberty by Non-state Armed Groups -- 3.2.5 Conclusion to Sect. 3.2 -- 3.3 FARC-EP's Detention of Members of Colombian Military Forces: The Impact of the Participation of the Former Members of the FARC-EP Secretariat in the Delimitation of IHL.