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Monday, 29 November 2021

During the months of September and November 2021, the award-winning online Customary IHL Database of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was updated with practice from Georgia up to the end of 2017, as well as South Africa and Uruguay up to the end of 2014. This recently added practice is marked in green throughout the database.

A team of British Red Cross researchers based at the Lauterpacht Centre, working in close collaboration with the ICRC, analysed and processed the source material.

The aim of the Customary IHL Database is to provide up-to-date, accurate, extensive and geographically diverse information in the field of international humanitarian law (IHL) and to make this information readily accessible to practitioners and researchers. The Customary IHL Project is a joint undertaking of the British Red Cross and the ICRC, established in 2007, and updates the practice section of the ICRC’s 2005 Study on customary IHL, which was originally published by Cambridge University Press.

The formation of customary law is a continuous process. For this reason, practice is updated regularly to allow users of the Database to monitor:

  • the application and interpretation of IHL,
  • potential developments in practice and
  • the extent to which the rules of IHL contribute to protection for victims of armed conflict and to the regulation of means and methods of warfare.

Since December 2019 the rules section of the ICRC’s 2005 Study on customary IHL is available on the Customary IHL Database in six new languages in addition to English: Arabic, Chinese, French, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish.

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