Publication

30 Mar 2009

This publication addresses the impact of explosive ordnance such as landmines and cluster munitions on society and more specifically on peace negotiations. The authors argue that principles and guidelines for dealing with explosive ordnance have an appropriate place in peace agreements, to prevent further injury or weapons recycling. They examine emerging norms for addressing explosive ordnance from an international humanitarian law perspective and how it works in practice before providing suggestions for when parties are present at the negotiating table.

Download English (PDF, 30 pages, 788 KB)
Author Emilie LeBrun, Suzanne Damann
Series HD Centre Publications
Issue 2
Publisher Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD Centre)
Copyright © 2009 Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue
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