The identification of medical aircraft in periods of armed conflict

1982 ◽  
Vol 22 (229) ◽  
pp. 202-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe Eberlin

Since the end of the Second World War, technological developments in armaments have produced increasingly sophisticated weapons. The most dangerous of these for air transports protected by the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 are remote controlled missiles equipped with homing devices, the operating raduis of which exceeds the visual range of the protective emblems recognized by these Conventions and carried by medical aircraft. The visual range of the emblem is frequently much less than 1,000 metres.

1989 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-228
Author(s):  
A. R. Hyland ◽  
D. J. Faulkner

AbstractThe twenty years following the Second World War saw great changes in the research interests of the Observatory at Mount Stromlo, with the early emphasis on solar and geophysical phenomena giving way to stellar and galactic astrophysics. This paper traces the development of the astrophysical research work during the directorships of Woolley, who initiated the change of direction, and of Bok, who continued it. Apart from the shift in the Observatory’s research interests, these years were distinguished by (i) an outstanding period of telescope acquisition, which saw the commissioning of the 74 inch reflector, the 50 inch (formerly the Great Melbourne Telescope), the Yale/Columbia refractor (relocated from South Africa), and the Uppsala Schmidt; (ii) an Australia-wide site-testing programme and the consequent establishment of Siding Spring Observatory with the 40 inch, 24 inch and 16 inch reflectors (the site has subsequently, of course, also become the home of the Anglo-Australian Telescope, the U.K. Schmidt, and the ANU 2.3 m Advanced Technology Telescope); (iii) the incorporation of several major technological developments into the instrument complement of the Observatory, including photo-electric photometry, coudé spectroscopy, spectrum scanners, polarization instruments, and digital computers; (iv) the establishment of the link with the Australian National University and the consequent transformation of the Commonwealth Observatory into the Mount Stromlo Observatory; and (v) the setting up of a large and vigorous graduate school, comprising, at Bok’s departure, about fifteen PhD students on course.


Ars Adriatica ◽  
2015 ◽  
pp. 89 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Štrmelj

The fort of St Michael on the island of Ugljan, situated on the exceptionally advantageous strategic site of the hill bearing the same name, had a significant role with regard to the control of the maritime section of the Zadar commune throughout its history. Although the same site must have been occupied by a fort already in the late antiquity, the present-day fort is very significant because it represents a relatively rare and a reasonably well preserved monument of medieval fortification architecture in the region. The main aim of this article is to publish the new visual material in order to contribute to our knowledge about the fort before it was damaged in the bombing during the Second World War and to point to the sources which have become available to the scholarship thanks to technological developments.


1997 ◽  
Vol 37 (321) ◽  
pp. 623-634
Author(s):  
Jacques Stroun

Shortly after the Second World War the community of States, still shocked by the explosion of violence that had torn the world apart for more than five years, ratified an updated version of the Geneva Conventions in the hope of acquiring a sound legal instrument which would preserve human dignity even in times of war. They undertook to respect the fundamental rights of the individual in armed conflicts, whether international or otherwise, and to limit the use of force to what was strictly necessary to place an enemy hors de combat. Their resolve found confirmation in the two Additional Protocols of 1977.


1961 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 250-257
Author(s):  
Boško Jakovljevlć ◽  
Jovica Patrnogić

The 12th of August 1949 is without doubt one of the most important dates in humanitarian law and in the development of the idea of the protection of man. It was then that four new Conventions were adopted in Geneva relative to the protection of victims of armed conflicts. In so far as they express general condemnation of war crimes committed during the Second World War, as well as the determination to prevent their recurrence in any possible sort of future conflict, the Geneva Conventions must be regarded as a bastion for the protection of all victims of armed conflict as well as a serious warning to all those who might be disposed to make a misuse of force or violate humanitarian principles. This great victory of the humanitarian spirit and of the principles which it inspires, by virtue of which one should not only avoid inflicting suffering on those who are deprived of protection or on non-combatants, but one should also accord them assistance and care for them if necessary, is due to a large extent to the Red Cross. The forces of progress have given their support to this idea and have made possible its realization within the framework of the International Conventions of the Red Cross. The new Geneva Conventions, which in the evolution of humanitarian law at present represent a decisive phase in a given sector, constitute an extremely solid and complete legal code which has been meticulously drawn up and which is both logical and coherent.


1962 ◽  
Vol 2 (20) ◽  
pp. 581-591
Author(s):  
Rudolf Von Neumann

The Central Tracing Agency in Geneva has always had, amongst many other tasks in time of war, that of tracing the graves of missing military personnel. If we are more especially considering the Second World War, we can see that this activity began for the Central Prisoners of War Agency (its official title at that time), when hundreds of thousands of regimental enquiries were opened for French prisoners of war in Germany, in order to discover the fate of French military personnel missing during the summer of 1940.


Author(s):  
Astrid Kjeldgaard-Pedersen

Chapter 5 first assesses the extent to which the law of international armed conflict engages individuals directly and the impact of the different conceptions of international legal personality on the formation and application of the relevant treaty norms. Sections 5.1 and 5.2 study both provisions that do regulate the conduct of individuals directly, and provisions where such direct regulation was discussed but ultimately discarded in favour of an inter-State model. Turning to non-international armed conflict, Section 5.3 outlines the development of the doctrine of ‘recognition of belligerency’ between the late eighteenth century and the Second World War. Subsequently, Section 5.4 examines the role of the concept of international legal personality in the post-Second World War formation of treaty norms governing non-international armed conflicts. The chapter ends with a discussion of the diverging jurisprudential explanations in the current academic debate for the bindingness of international law on armed opposition groups.


1953 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 590-614 ◽  
Author(s):  
A . R. Albrecht

The war crimes trials following the second World War and the Geneva Conventions of 1949 have posed a question about war reprisals which is likely to be important in any future war and which has immediate practical significance in the current wars in Asia. On the one hand, the trials have transformed the previously sketchy rules on reprisals into a more comprehensive and elaborate system of control. On the other hand, the Geneva Conventions have provided for almost the complete abolition of reprisals in the very area for which the rules of control were formulated. Moreover, the conventions remain unratified by many of the major Powers, of which at least one has already demonstrated its inability to observe the abolition of reprisals. The core of the problem concerns reprisals against civilian persons in occupied territories, for this was by far the most significant point in the trials on reprisals and was the subject of the most outstanding innovation introduced by the Geneva Conventions. Nevertheless, the issues raised by the contradiction between the trials and the conventions cannot properly be discussed without reference to the general theory of war reprisals.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-162
Author(s):  
David J. Krus ◽  
James M. Webb

Critical appraisal and consideration of the motivational factors of an opposing side are important components in the adoption of a nonviolent attitude towards conflict resolution. This assumption is examined in the contexts of the Persian Gulf War and the Pacific theater of the Second World War. 23 graduate students responded to two narratives.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noah Carl

The period of relative peace in Europe since the end of the Second World War has been variously described as the ‘Pax Europaea’ and the ‘Pax Americana’. These descriptions reflect two major theories purporting to account for the relative absence of armed conflict during this period: one emphasising the pacifying impact of the EU, and the other emphasising the pacifying impact of the US/NATO. The present paper attempts to evaluate these theories by comparing the role of the EU and the US/NATO in several domains of armed conflict in Europe. It focuses on the mechanisms through which the two organisations have affected the risk and scale of armed conflict within each domain. Although both the EU and the US/NATO have contributed to the relative peace in Europe since the end of the Second World War, there is at least one domain in which each of the organisations has either exacerbated or failed to prevent armed conflict. Understanding the limitations of the two organisations, as well as their strengths, will be important for bolstering European security as the continent faces new geopolitical challenges.


1974 ◽  
Vol 14 (161) ◽  
pp. 420-422
Author(s):  
Jean Pictet

August 12, 1949 was an important date in world history. It was on that day that the plenipotentiaries of some sixty States signed the fundamental charters of humanity which are known as the four Geneva Conventions, and which protect the victims of armed conflicts: the first, the military wounded and sick; the second, the victims of war at sea; the third, the prisoners of war; and the fourth—which was entirely new—civilians. After the suffering of the population in occupied countries during the Second World War, such a treaty appeared to be vitally necessary and urgent. As Max Huber said, the development towards total war has made danger and hardship equal for armies and population.


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