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Print Edition
Rüdiger Wolfrum
10 volume set
£1,995.00
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Reimagining Child Soldiers in International Law and Policy
Mark A. Drumbl
256 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-959265-4
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Hardback
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26 January 2012
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- Challenges the conventional wisdom that narrowly presents child soldiers as passive victims
- Approaches child soldiers as contributors to post-conflict reconciliation
- Provides a comprehensive and interdisciplinary overview of child soldiering world-wide
The international community's efforts to halt child soldiering have yielded some successes. But this pernicious practice persists. It may shift locally, but it endures globally. Preventative measures therefore remain inadequate. Former child soldiers experience challenges readjusting to civilian life. Reintegration is complex and eventful. The homecoming is only the beginning. Reconciliation within communities afflicted by violence committed by and against child soldiers is incomplete. Shortfalls linger on the restorative front. The international community strives to eradicate the scourge of child
soldiering. Mostly, though, these efforts replay the same narratives and circulate the same assumptions. Current humanitarian discourse sees child soldiers as passive victims, tools of war, vulnerable, psychologically devastated, and not responsible for their violent acts. This perception has come to suffuse international law and policy. Although reflecting much of the lives of child soldiers, this portrayal also omits critical aspects. This book pursues an alternate path by reimagining the child soldier. It approaches child soldiers with a more nuanced and less judgmental mind. This book takes a second look at these efforts. It aspires to refresh law and policy so as to improve preventative, restorative, and remedial initiatives while also vivifying the
dignity of youth. Along the way, Drumbl questions central tenets of contemporary humanitarianism and rethinks elements of international criminal justice. This ground-breaking book is essential reading for anyone committed to truly emboldening the rights of the child. It offers a way to think about child soldiers that would invigorate international law, policy, and best practices. Where does this reimagination lead? Not toward retributive criminal trials, but instead toward restorative forms of justice. Toward forgiveness instead of excuse, thereby facilitating reintegration and promoting social repair within afflicted communities. Toward a better understanding of child soldiering, without which the practice cannot be ended. This book also offers fresh thinking on related issues, ranging
from juvenile justice, to humanitarian interventions, to the universality of human rights, to the role of law in responding to mass atrocity.Readership: Scholars and post-graduate students of international criminal justice, international humanitarian law, transitional justice, and war studies; government and NGO legal advisers and policy-makers dealing with questions related to child soldiers
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Mark A. Drumbl, Class of 1975 Alumni Professor of Law; Director, Transnational Law Institute, Washington and Lee University Mark A. Drumbl is the Class of 1975 Alumni Professor at Washington & Lee University, School of Law, where he also serves as Director of its Transnational Law Institute. He has held visiting appointments with a number of law faculties, including Oxford, Paris II (Panthéon-Assas), Trinity College-Dublin, Melbourne, and Ottawa. Drumbl has lectured and published extensively on public international law, international criminal law, and transitional justice. His first book Atrocity, Punishment, and International Law (CUP, 2007) has been widely reviewed and critically acclaimed. He
initially became interested in international criminal justice through his work in the Rwandan genocide jails. Drumbl holds degrees in law and politics from McGill University, University of Toronto, and Columbia University.
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"By drawing on different methodologies and research from diverse disciplines, Drumbl goes beyond the traditional approach adopted by international lawyers and thus offers a broader and more detailed examination of child soldiering than other works in this area. Additionally, his willingness to confront the often uncomfortable reality of children's voluntary participation both in armed conflict and, to a much smaller degree, in atrocities, is to be welcomed. As such, this study is an invaluable source for academics and students interested in this highly topical and controversial issue as well as for law and policy-makers involved in initiatives addressing the child soldier phenomenon." - Jastine Barrett, BYIL "Drumbl draws on
insights from numerous disciplines - developmental psychology, anthropological and ethnographic research, and critical intersectionality theory. He deploys these interdisciplinary insights skillfully to contest contemporary legal fictions...Whether or not one agrees with Drumbl's prescriptions, his book illuminates one of the darkest aspects of current conflicts and reinvigorates the international legal imagination." - Jose E. Alvarez, New York University School of Law "Stimulating and provocative, Mark Drumbl provides us with a new understanding of what he calls the oxymoron of child soldiers. It is a discussion that is traditionally plagued with cliche, shibboleth and stereotype. His imaginative analysis of the subject is set out here with rich nuance and
distinction, and presented in sparkling prose." - William Schabas, Middlesex University, London "Expertly argued, scrupulously presented and intellectually assured, Reimagining Child Soldiers offers a subtle, often unorthodox, retort to the prevailing intellectual and legal currents. It is always a pleasure to come upon a book whose very great ambitions are fully realised. Mark Drumbl has set the agenda on this subject for years to come." - Gerry Simpson, University of Melbourne "This well researched book challenges us to rethink whether there should be greater accountability for child soldiers who are implicated in acts of atrocity. Rejecting simplistic images of child soldiers as passive victims or as being all alike, it calls
attention to children's agency and invites fresh consideration of the value of accountability, not through retributive trials but through reintegrative and restorative justice processes." - Mike Wessells, PhD, Columbia University "...this book canvasses a broad range of literature, such as ethnographic participant observations, anthropological studies, qualitative research, survey data and feminist theory. The author integrates them robustly into conversations about child soldiering and objectively demonstrates the problems concealed in the existing law and policy." - Lingling Zhu and Huan Lu, Chinese Journal of International Law
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1: Coming of Age in Atrocity
2: Children Who Soldier: Practices, Politics, and Perceptions
3: Not So Simple
4: Child Soldiers and Accountability
5: Unlawful Recruitment and Use of Children: From Proscription to Prevention
6: Rights, Wrongs, and Transitional Reconstruction
7: Reinvigorating the International Legal Imagination
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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