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  | assistants =   
  | assistants =   
  | enregistrement =  
  | enregistrement =  
  | cours = [[International humanitarian law]]
  | cours = [[Droit international humanitaire]]
  | lectures =
  | lectures =
*[[Introduction to the course on international humanitarian law]]
*[[Introduction au cours de droit international humanitaire]]
*[[Sources of the law of armed conflict]]
*[[Les sources du droit des conflits armés]]
*[[The applicability of the law of armed conflict]]
*[[L’applicabilité du droit des conflits armés]]
*[[The substantive rules of the law of armed conflict]]
*[[Les règles matérielles du droit des conflits armés]]
*[[The rules of the law of non-international armed conflicts]]
*[[Les règles du droit des conflits armés non-internationaux]]
}}
}}


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For small states, it was still fundamental to have civilians to defend them, because if a state does not even have a regular army or if it is very small, there is no choice. For large states, it was convenient to say that only the regular army because it benefited them.
For small states, it was still fundamental to have civilians to defend them, because if a state does not even have a regular army or if it is very small, there is no choice. For large states, it was convenient to say that only the regular army because it benefited them.


So, important preparatory work existed, but there was no law of war at the international level, there was a codification at the internal level, as, for example, the United States with the Lieber code had a very good codification already applied in its civil war, namely the Civil War.
So, important preparatory work existed, but there was no law of war at the international level, there was a codification at the internal level, as, for example, the United States with the Lieber code had a very good codification already applied in its civil war, namely the Civil War.[[File:The First International Peace Conference, the Hague, May - June 1899 HU67224.jpg|thumb|250px|The First Hague Conference in 1899.]]This was achieved in 1899 with the Hague Conference, whose main purpose was not to codify the law of war. The main purpose of this conference was twofold: disarmament on the one hand and the peaceful settlement of disputes on the other. In any case, it was therefore a question of preventing war, not so much of organizing it, of laying down rules for doing so, but of preventing it by arbitration, if possible compulsory, first because a settled dispute is a dispute that will not lead to war, and then disarmament, because the link between the means of waging war and peace is quite obvious, in any case, this is one of the great theses of the nineteenth century, which is that it is overarmament that also leads to armed conflicts.
 
[[File:The First International Peace Conference, the Hague, May - June 1899 HU67224.jpg|thumb|250px|The First Hague Conference in 1899.]]
 
This was achieved in 1899 with the Hague Conference, whose main purpose was not to codify the law of war. The main purpose of this conference was twofold: disarmament on the one hand and the peaceful settlement of disputes on the other. In any case, it was therefore a question of preventing war, not so much of organizing it, of laying down rules for doing so, but of preventing it by arbitration, if possible compulsory, first because a settled dispute is a dispute that will not lead to war, and then disarmament, because the link between the means of waging war and peace is quite obvious, in any case, this is one of the great theses of the nineteenth century, which is that it is overarmament that also leads to armed conflicts.


It quickly became clear at the Hague Conference that progress could not be made on these two issues, at least not decisive progress; on disarmament, in any case, no real progress could be achieved even if only because at the time States had very different growth rates in the military field. There were States making considerable efforts to modernize the army, it was a time of motorization of the army, and therefore of great expansion in the development of the army, while other States were stagnating, such as Russia for example, there were many internal problems. Because of these very strong differences, it is impossible to reach an agreement on disarmament. If we are a state that is developing very rapidly, while another state is losing momentum, the one that is developing rapidly will obviously never agree to disarm because it is losing its relative advantage; it is digging at that time; to have disarmament situations, we need situations of much greater stability between states, almost a situation of balance. One solution is to reduce proportionally on both sides, but not in moments of growth when some grow stronger and others fall into hell.
It quickly became clear at the Hague Conference that progress could not be made on these two issues, at least not decisive progress; on disarmament, in any case, no real progress could be achieved even if only because at the time States had very different growth rates in the military field. There were States making considerable efforts to modernize the army, it was a time of motorization of the army, and therefore of great expansion in the development of the army, while other States were stagnating, such as Russia for example, there were many internal problems. Because of these very strong differences, it is impossible to reach an agreement on disarmament. If we are a state that is developing very rapidly, while another state is losing momentum, the one that is developing rapidly will obviously never agree to disarm because it is losing its relative advantage; it is digging at that time; to have disarmament situations, we need situations of much greater stability between states, almost a situation of balance. One solution is to reduce proportionally on both sides, but not in moments of growth when some grow stronger and others fall into hell.
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C’est donc un échec sur les deux plans. À ce moment-là, la conférence s’est tout simplement dit qu’on ne peut pas aboutir alors que les attentes étaient énormes, c’était une conférence de paix, la première grande conférence. Et donc, on a repris la seule chose sur laquelle on pensait pouvoir aboutir, c’est-à-dire, le droit des conflits armés. Pourquoi pensait-on pouvoir aboutir ? Pour la simple raison que des travaux avaient déjà été faits. Il y avait quelques points d’achoppement, mais le gros du travail déjà était fait à Bruxelles en 1874. C’est donc à ce titre qu’on a adopté les conventions de La Haye. Elles étaient quatre en 1899, on aboutit à quatorze si on compte aussi la déclaration qui est un texte, qui est un traité, en 1907. Donc, petit départ en 1899, puis grand essor en 1907.
C’est donc un échec sur les deux plans. À ce moment-là, la conférence s’est tout simplement dit qu’on ne peut pas aboutir alors que les attentes étaient énormes, c’était une conférence de paix, la première grande conférence. Et donc, on a repris la seule chose sur laquelle on pensait pouvoir aboutir, c’est-à-dire, le droit des conflits armés. Pourquoi pensait-on pouvoir aboutir ? Pour la simple raison que des travaux avaient déjà été faits. Il y avait quelques points d’achoppement, mais le gros du travail déjà était fait à Bruxelles en 1874. C’est donc à ce titre qu’on a adopté les conventions de La Haye. Elles étaient quatre en 1899, on aboutit à quatorze si on compte aussi la déclaration qui est un texte, qui est un traité, en 1907. Donc, petit départ en 1899, puis grand essor en 1907.


== The Conventions ==
== The conventions ==
The first convention is not the law of armed conflict, it is arbitration. Not all conventions deal with the law of armed conflict, but the vast majority of Hague conventions are the law of war or the law of armed conflict, the law of war as it was called at the time.
The first convention is not the law of armed conflict, it is arbitration. Not all conventions deal with the law of armed conflict, but the vast majority of Hague conventions are the law of war or the law of armed conflict, the law of war as it was called at the time.


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The first deals with military personnel, i.e. soldiers wounded or sick in the war on land. The Second Geneva Convention deals with wounded, sick or shipwrecked soldiers in the theatre of maritime warfare. The difference between the first and second conventions is therefore one of theatre of war and not of assigned personnel. The personnel are the same, they are military personnel, the situation that gives rise to protection is the same, injury, illness and shipwreck status as far as maritime theatre is concerned. What differentiates the two is therefore the theatre, once on land and once on sea. The reason for separating the two conventions is that the organization of care for the wounded and sick is relatively different on land and at sea for reasons that can be understood relatively quickly. At sea, the protection of the wounded and sick is done in hospital ships, and this protection cannot be decentralized much since there is no firm land.
The first deals with military personnel, i.e. soldiers wounded or sick in the war on land. The Second Geneva Convention deals with wounded, sick or shipwrecked soldiers in the theatre of maritime warfare. The difference between the first and second conventions is therefore one of theatre of war and not of assigned personnel. The personnel are the same, they are military personnel, the situation that gives rise to protection is the same, injury, illness and shipwreck status as far as maritime theatre is concerned. What differentiates the two is therefore the theatre, once on land and once on sea. The reason for separating the two conventions is that the organization of care for the wounded and sick is relatively different on land and at sea for reasons that can be understood relatively quickly. At sea, the protection of the wounded and sick is done in hospital ships, and this protection cannot be decentralized much since there is no firm land.


The Third Geneva Convention deals with the protection of prisoners of war. It is already significantly longer and more extensive than the first two. It should be noted that there is an overlap in application between Conventions I, II and III; this means that if an opposing soldier has been captured without injury or illness, Convention III applies, whereas if the same soldier has been captured or surrendered with injuries or illness, Convention I and Convention III apply at the same time, or, as the case may be, Convention II is Convention III. Convention IV deals with the protection of civilians.
The Third Geneva Convention deals with the protection of prisoners of war. It is already significantly longer and more extensive than the first two. It should be noted that there is an overlap in application between Conventions I, II and III; this means that if an opposing soldier has been captured without injury or illness, Convention III applies, whereas if the same soldier has been captured or surrenders with injuries or illness, Convention I and Convention III apply at the same time, or, as the case may be, Convention II is Convention III. Convention IV deals with the protection of civilians.


The first three are not new in the sense that there are older Geneva Conventions than the 1949 Geneva Convention simply needs to be revised. Convention IV, on the other hand, is entirely new, as civilians were not protected by IHL until 1949 with the exception of a few scattered provisions, particularly in the law of war occupation of the 1907 Hague Regulations.
The first three are not new in the sense that there are older Geneva Conventions than the 1949 Geneva Convention simply needs to be revised. Convention IV, on the other hand, is entirely new, as civilians were not protected by IHL until 1949 with the exception of a few scattered provisions, particularly in the law of war occupation of the 1907 Hague Regulations.
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