Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 832
Trim: 7½ x 10¼
978-1-4422-2112-3 • Hardback • December 2013 • $229.00 • (£177.00)
978-1-4422-2141-3 • Paperback • December 2013 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-1-4422-2113-0 • eBook • December 2013 • $121.50 • (£94.00)
Françoise Bouchet-Saulnier is the legal director of Médecins Sans Frontières.
Under the sponsorship of the international relief organization Doctors Without Borders, Bouchet-Saulnier has prepared a valuable guide to humanitarian law around the world. . . . This new edition contains nearly 180 topical entries arranged alphabetically. They are presented in an easy-to-use format with multiple subheadings and guides to further reading. The longest entries focus on compelling topics such as detention, genocide, international law, peacekeeping, prisoners of war, refugees, responsibility, and war crimes. . . . This book belongs in every law library. . . . Recommended. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Choice Reviews
Sheds a refreshingly simple light on the intricacies of humanitarian law and the subtleties of such things as international relations, insofar as they bear upon the substantive legal issues. The Guide both fills an important gap and serves as a timely reminder that trees do in fact exist in the woods of humanitarian law. Students ought to find this book useful as a supplement to their academic texts; 'coal-face' humanitarian workers, including many lawyers, may find it to be very valuable by way of a brief encyclopedic reference; and academics [will find] a useful plain English quiver within their array of legalistic weapons. Bouchet-Saulnier is to be congratulated for this no-nonsense publication. (Previous Edition Praise)
— International Peacekeeping
A valuable tool for defenders of human rights. (Previous Edition Praise)
— The New Observer
A work with terms so clear and precise it resembles a concise legislation. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Le Monde
Excellent—authoritative, succinct, comprehensive, and practical. The book will certainly be invaluable for NGO workers, journalists, peacekeepers, and others whose work brings them into contact with issues and situations which raise human rights issues, or who work in areas of repression and/or violent conflict. The work is not only full and detailed, it is set out with admirable clarity. For the combination of reliability and ease of use, it would be difficult to better this volume. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Journal Of Humanitarian Assistance
Here is a reference work that will really serve. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Ouest-France
There is no need to be a legal expert to read this reference work and find it useful. It is a mine of information, not only for humanitarian personnel, but also for anyone who—through media reports—has been sensitized to the problems associated with humanitarian aid (ethnic cleansing, refugees, etc.). A book to be put in the hands of all future graduates in humanitarian affairs. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Humanitarian Affairs Reivew
Anyone who works or lives in the world's zones of danger needs to have a practical knowledge of international humanitarian law. This guide is clear, accessible, and reliable. So it is invaluable. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Michael Ignatieff, Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University
Unique. . . . As violent conflagrations erupt in many parts of the world, this book provides a very useful guide to exceedingly difficult territory, including the specific organizations and institutions that deal with these harsh problems. The Practical Guide to Humanitarian Law is clear and not technical, yet precise and well documented. Altogether, it is a valuable contribution to our ceaseless quest for a more compassionate humanity. (Previous Edition Praise)
— David A. Hamburg M.D., president emeritus, Carnegie Corporation of New York