Towards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of Hostilities

When should international humanitarian law (IHL) apply? When should it prevail over, and when should it give way to international human rights law (IHRL) in regulating the conduct of hostilities during international and non-international armed conflicts? IHL and IHRL give diverging answers to the cr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dill, J
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2020
_version_ 1797106855433994240
author Dill, J
author_facet Dill, J
author_sort Dill, J
collection OXFORD
description When should international humanitarian law (IHL) apply? When should it prevail over, and when should it give way to international human rights law (IHRL) in regulating the conduct of hostilities during international and non-international armed conflicts? IHL and IHRL give diverging answers to the crucial question of when it is legally permissible to kill another person. Following the customary IHL principles of distinction, proportionality and necessity systematically leads to breaches of the legal provisions safeguarding the human right to life. Some legal scholars, notably Helen Duffy in this volume, do not acknowledge this norm conflict, but aver that the two bodies of law can be reconciled through interpretation. Those that reject a substantive convergence between IHL and IHRL tend to take one of three broad positions: many argue that the norm conflict can be resolved by reference to lex specialis; others suggest that, in each instance, the rule should prevail that affords greater protection; yet others cast the matter as depending on which rules states intended to apply in a given context.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:06:49Z
format Book section
id oxford-uuid:d7218cc2-4940-4928-bb5f-9948044aa167
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:06:49Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:d7218cc2-4940-4928-bb5f-9948044aa1672022-05-12T15:00:38ZTowards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of HostilitiesBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:d7218cc2-4940-4928-bb5f-9948044aa167EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordCambridge University Press2020Dill, JWhen should international humanitarian law (IHL) apply? When should it prevail over, and when should it give way to international human rights law (IHRL) in regulating the conduct of hostilities during international and non-international armed conflicts? IHL and IHRL give diverging answers to the crucial question of when it is legally permissible to kill another person. Following the customary IHL principles of distinction, proportionality and necessity systematically leads to breaches of the legal provisions safeguarding the human right to life. Some legal scholars, notably Helen Duffy in this volume, do not acknowledge this norm conflict, but aver that the two bodies of law can be reconciled through interpretation. Those that reject a substantive convergence between IHL and IHRL tend to take one of three broad positions: many argue that the norm conflict can be resolved by reference to lex specialis; others suggest that, in each instance, the rule should prevail that affords greater protection; yet others cast the matter as depending on which rules states intended to apply in a given context.
spellingShingle Dill, J
Towards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of Hostilities
title Towards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of Hostilities
title_full Towards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of Hostilities
title_fullStr Towards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of Hostilities
title_full_unstemmed Towards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of Hostilities
title_short Towards a moral division of labour between IHL and IHRL during the Conduct of Hostilities
title_sort towards a moral division of labour between ihl and ihrl during the conduct of hostilities
work_keys_str_mv AT dillj towardsamoraldivisionoflabourbetweenihlandihrlduringtheconductofhostilities