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The Image before the Weapon - A Critical History of the Distinction between Combatant and Civilian (Paperback)
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The Image before the Weapon - A Critical History of the Distinction between Combatant and Civilian (Paperback)
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Since at least the Middle Ages, the laws of war have distinguished
between combatants and civilians under an injunction now formally
known as the principle of distinction. The principle of distinction
is invoked in contemporary conflicts as if there were an
unmistakable and sure distinction to be made between combatant and
civilian. As is so brutally evident in armed conflicts, it is
precisely the distinction between civilian and combatant, upon
which the protection of civilians is founded, cannot be taken as
self-evident or stable. Helen M. Kinsella documents that the
history of international humanitarian law itself admits the
difficulty of such a distinction. In The Image Before the Weapon,
Kinsella explores the evolution of the concept of the civilian and
how it has been applied in warfare. A series of
discourses-including gender, innocence, and civilization- have
shaped the legal, military, and historical understandings of the
civilian and she documents how these discourses converge at
particular junctures to demarcate the difference between civilian
and combatant. Engaging with works on the law of war from the
earliest thinkers in the Western tradition, including St. Thomas
Aquinas and Christine de Pisan, to contemporary figures such as
James Turner Johnson and Michael Walzer, Kinsella identifies the
foundational ambiguities and inconsistencies in the principle of
distinction, as well as the significant role played by Christian
concepts of mercy and charity. She then turns to the definition and
treatment of civilians in specific armed conflicts: the American
Civil War and the U.S.-Indian Wars of the nineteenth century, and
the civil wars of Guatemala and El Salvador in the 1980s. Finally,
she analyzes the two modern treaties most influential for the
principle of distinction: the 1949 IV Geneva Convention Relative to
the Protection of Civilian Persons in Times of War and the 1977
Protocols Additional to the 1949 Conventions, which for the first
time formally defined the civilian within international law. She
shows how the experiences of the two world wars, but particularly
World War II, and the Algerian war of independence affected these
subsequent codifications of the laws of war. As recognition grows
that compliance with the principle of distinction to limit violence
against civilians depends on a firmer grasp of its legal,
political, and historical evolution, The Image before the Weapon is
a timely intervention in debates about how best to protect civilian
populations.
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