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55 Vand. J. Transnat'l L. 681 (2022)
Criminalizing Starvation in an Age of Mass Deprivation in War: Intent, Method, Form, and Consequence

handle is hein.journals/vantl55 and id is 707 raw text is: Criminalizing Starvation in an
Age of Mass Deprivation in War:
Intent, Method, Form, and
Consequence
Tom Dannenbaum*
ABSTRACT
Mass starvation in war is resurgent. Across a range of conflicts,
belligerents have attacked    farmers and    humanitarian    workers;
destroyed, looted, or rendered unusable food and food sources; and cut
off besieged populations from the external supply of essential goods.
Millions have been left in famine or on the brink thereof. Increasingly,
this has elicited calls for accountability. However, traditional criminal
categories are not promising in this respect. The situation and nature of
objects indispensable to survival is such that they typically provide
sustenance to both civilians and combatants; the conduct that deprives
people of those objects often involves acting on the objects, rather than
acting directly on the affected persons; and the causal chain from
deprivation to civilian suffering is long and complex. Appropriately,
then, attention has turned instead towards the recently codified and
largely untested war crime of starvation of civilians as a method of
warfare. Whether and how this framework can underpin a legal
response to mass deprivation hinges on how key debates as to the crime's
meaning are resolved. Entering those debates, this Article debunks the
common view that the starvation crime attaches only to conduct that
seeks to weaponize civilian suffering. Instead, it presents an alternative
theory according to which the crime should be understood transitively
as focused primarily on the act of deprivation, rather than the outcome
it produces. This approach would reshape how to think about the crime,
with particularly acute implications for the regulation of sieges and
blockades.
*  Associate Professor of International Law, The Fletcher School of Law &
Diplomacy, Tufts University. The author is grateful for conversations on this and related
working papers at the Hauser Colloquium at New York University School of Law, the
Junior International Law Scholars Association Workshop at Cornell Law School, the
U.S. Consultative Meeting for the Revision of the San Remo Manual on International
Law Applicable to Conflicts at Sea at the United States Naval War College, and the ICC
Scholars Forum, hosted virtually by Leiden University. All errors are the responsibility
of the author.

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