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Podcast: ICRC Humanitarian Law and Policy Blog
Episode: Environmental destruction in conflict: broadening accountability in war
Description: International law recognizes the importance of environmental protection during armed conflict. Additional Protocol I of the Geneva Conventions was the first treaty to formally prohibit warfare methods that cause widespread, long-term, and severe environmental damage. The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) further criminalizes damage to the natural environment as a war crime, though its high threshold has so far prevented its use. The existing initiatives to define βecocideβ aim, among other things, to broaden accountability beyond armed conflict and include corporations.
In this post, part of the Emerging Voices series, Iryna Rekrut, Legal Fellow at the Center for...