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9 Rev. Eur. Comp. & Int'l Envtl. L. iii (2000)

handle is hein.journals/reel9 and id is 1 raw text is: 


RECIEL 9 (1) 2000. ISSN 0962 8797


Editorial


This year's first RECIEL starts with a new look. Apart
from a new cover page and a changed layout, the reader
will also notice that RECIEL now uses footnotes rather
than endnotes. Although the structure of the contents
of this RECIEL  has remained the same,  a number  of
further changes will be introduced over the next few
issues. From issue 9:3, RECIEL  will introduce more
comprehensive  coverage of the environmental case law
of the European  Court of Justice, which will be the
responsibility of two new case law editors. In the near
future RECIEL  will also become a peer-reviewed jour-
nal. In the meantime  I would like to encourage once
again the 'spontaneous' submission of articles in order
to expand the non-thematic section of each RECIEL.

The theme  of this issue of RECIEL is 'Armed Conflict,
Security and the Environment'. Armed conflict, security
and  environmental problems  are closely linked. The
contributions to this issue of RECIEL discuss this link
from two  angles.

The first, and most obvious, connection is that armed
conflicts often have a significant impact on the environ-
ment. The  recently released final report of the joint
UNEP/UNCHS (Habitat) Task Force on the Balkans
(BTF) showed  that even the 'high-tech' Kosovo conflict
caused significant pollution at specific industrial sites
targeted by the NATO  air strikes. The report also sig-
naled the potential impact of the use of depleted uran-
ium ammunition  during the NATO  air strikes. Not only
acts of violence cause pressure on natural resources.
The stream  of refugees caused by the conflict put sig-
nificant pressure on the drinking water resources in the
overcrowded  refugee camps.

The second, less obvious, connection is that increasing
pressure on natural resources or environmental degra-
dation may  actually cause insecurity, potentially lead-
ing to  armed  conflicts. This approach, involving a
reconsideration of the 'security' concept, has become
increasingly prominent in the aftermath  of the Cold
War.  It has recently been the focus of a number  of
research projects, some of which are discussed in the
contribution by Edward  Page  in this volume. In the
most narrow  interpretation of 'security', conflicts over
natural resources such as fresh water have in the past
been  an important cause of armed  conflicts between
states and will continue to be so. In a wider interpret-
ation of 'security', environmental problems such as the
effects of climate change  and  ozone  depletion are
increasingly threatening the lives and means of exist-
ence of communities  and individuals.


The first three contributions in the thematic section of
this RECIEL  focus on the impact of armed conflicts on
the environment. In his contribution on 'The Protection
of Cultural Property  During Wartime',  Mark  Driver
examines  the international legal regime for the protec-
tion of cultural heritage during wartime. He discusses
a number  of international conventions and finds that
these generally focus on cultural property in a narrow
sense, excluding the natural and indigenous  cultural
heritage, and do not apply during civil conflicts. He also
examines  a number  of recent armed conflicts and the
impact of those conflicts on cultural property, and dis-
cusses recent initiatives to improve awareness of the
need  to protect cultural property in the Iranian and
Australian armed forces. In his conclusions he stresses
the lack of monitoring  and  enforcement  of existing
rules and  calls for  a wider  and  more  pro-active
approach  to the protection of cultural property.


Jean-Marie  Henckaerts,  in his contribution entitled
'Towards  Better Protection for the Environment   in
Armed  Conflict: Recent Developments in International
Humanitarian  Law', examines  the usefulness of inter-
national humanitarian  law for the protection of the
environment  during armed  conflicts. His contribution
focuses on the work of the International Committee of
the Red  Cross (ICRC). He  briefly discusses the ICRC
'Guidelines for Military Manuals and Instructions on
the Protection of the Environment in Times of Armed
Conflict', which are included in the documents section
of this RECIEL. He also examines whether the destruc-
tion of the natural environment could fall within the
jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. His
contribution briefly addresses the preliminary  con-
clusions of the ICRC study on customary rules of inter-
national humanitarian  law, and the impact  of inter-
national environmental treaty law on the protection of
the environment  during armed conflicts.


In her contribution 'A New Shield for the Environment:
Peacetime  Treaties as Legal Restraints on  Wartime
Damage',  Silja Vbneky examines to what extent peace-
time environmental treaties also bind belligerent states.
She finds that there is no clear customary rule on the
application of peacetime  environmental  law  during
environmental  conflict. She then goes on to examine
the effects of war on the validity of treaties and con-
cludes that there are four categories of treaties that
continue to apply in times of war. Her article focuses
on an analysis of the last of these categories, which con-
tains treaties that oblige states to protect the environ-
ment  in the interest of the state community as a whole.


© Blackwell Publishers Ltd. 2000, 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA.


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