Book Chapter
Details
Citation
Wylie N & Landefeld S (2022) POWs, Civilians and the Post-War Development of International Humanitarian Law. In: Kowner R & Rachamimov I (eds.) Out of Line, Out of Place: A Global and Local History of World War 1 Internments. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, pp. 244-262.
Abstract
First paragraph:
This  chapter  takes  as  its  starting  point  a  discussion that took place at the first postwar conference of  the International Law  Association  (ILA),  held  in  Portsmouth,  England,  in  May1920.  While  the founding of  the League of  Nations the previous January provided the assembled jurists with plenty to debate, the conference organizers were eager to progress thinking on two areas of  law that had been found wanting in the Great War: the law of  the sea and the law governing the treatment of  prisoners of  war (POWs). As Lord Younger, the conference chair, noted in his opening  remarks,  the  existing  regulations  dealing  with  POWs—the  1899/1907  Hague rules—had proved utterly “powerless to prevent in innumerable notorious instances the suffering, undeserved, gratuitous, heartrending beyond expression, which thousands of  prisoners had to endure through these tragic years of  horror.” To help sharpen the discussions, two of  Britain’s foremost international lawyers, Hugh Bellot and George G. Phillimore, were invited to table a draft convention for POWs.
| Status | Published | 
|---|---|
| Funders | University of Stirling | 
| Publication date | 31/12/2022 | 
| Publication date online | 30/09/2022 | 
| URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/37296 | 
| Publisher | Cornell University Press | 
| Place of publication | Ithaca | 
| ISBN | 9781501765421 | 
| eISBN | 9781501765445 | 
People (1)
Senior Deputy Principal, History