Tort Liability in Warfare
States' Wrongs and Civilians' Rights
Abstract
Tort Liability in Warfare: States’ Wrongs and Civilians’ Rights develops a novel account of the tortious liability of states for wrongs they inflict on civilians during combat. Tort Liability in Warfare challenges orthodoxy by illustrating that ordinary domestic tort law doctrines could apply, as private law rights remain relevant during warfare and their wrongful violation triggers ordinary corrective justice duties. The book asserts that barring tort remedies for losses inflicted during warfare is not necessitated by theory or doctrine but is driven by policy considerations. Tort Liability in Warfare demonstrates that these policy considerations fail to provide adequate justifications for states’ near blanket immunity from tort liability in warfare, and calls for enabling civilians to turn to tort law as a mechanism for accountability and vindication of their rights.
Keywords
warfare, tort law, corrective justice, rule of law, international humanitarian law, rules of engagement, states’ liability, compensation, reparationsDOI
10.1093/9780191997051.001.0001ISBN
9780198893356Publisher
Oxford University PressPublisher website
https://0-global-oup-com.catalogue.libraries.london.ac.uk/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2024Classification
Law of torts, damages and compensation
Civil remedies
Public international law: human rights