International protection from unconventional weapons

Authors

  • dr. Nouf Abdalla Aljasmi University of Sharjah- college of law

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35246/jols.v37i2.556

Keywords:

Unconventional Weapons, International Conventions, International Organizations, International Protection

Abstract

War is one of the phenomena accompanying the human race since ancient times, so we find that the human element has mastered the use manufacture of weapons and worked on their development in order to provide means of protection and prevention from any external aggression by the enemies. The rapid developments on those weapons has led to an increase in their danger, Therefore, we find that the world limits their use production and that’s why many treaties have been concluded to dismantle them and limit their spread, and to preserve the security and stability of countries from the negative damages resulting from non-conventional weapons. From this standpoint, there are many existing international efforts to prevent the spread of non-conventional weapons in all its forms, to maintain international peace and security. In this research we will discuss the definition of weapons and their types, the upbringing and developments that man has gone through in the manufacture of unconventional weapons, and how man has harnessed natural materials and used them in non-human industries, and how he made them with his use of what has been invented of modern technology and applications in harming the human race not only, But also in harming all living creatures on the surface of the earth, as well as the environment around it, and finally methods of protection and prevention from these unconventional weapons.

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References

Books:

i. Falah Shihab Ahmed, 2021, The Role of International Organizations in Limiting the Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction, Dare lgamaa elgadida, Alexandria.

ii. Abdel-Hadi Mesbah, 2000, Biological and Chemical Weapons, Al Dar Al Masriah Al Lubnaniah, First Edition.

iii. Muammar Ratib Muhammad Abd al-Hafiz, 2014, Possession and Use of Nuclear Weapons in Light of International Covenants and Agreements, Dar al-Kutub al-Qanuni, Egypt.

iv. Omar bin Abdullah Al-Balushi, 2007, The Legality of Weapons of Mass Destruction According to the Rules of International Law, Manshorat Al Halabi Alhuquqia, Beirut, Lebanon, 1st edition.

v. Mahmoud Khairy Banouta, 1971, International Law in the Use of Nuclear Energy, Dar Al-Shaab Press, Cairo.

vi. Hanouf Mohamed Hassan Ramadan, 2012, Biological Weapons in Light of the Rules of International Law, Dar al-Kutub al-Qanuni, Egypt.

vii. Mahmoud Sharif Bassiouni, 1992, Crimes Against Humanity in International Criminal Law.

viii. United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, Establishment of a Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone in the Middle East, United Nations publication, Geneva (Switzerland).

- University Theses:

i. Mahmoud Ibrahim Abd al-Rahman Shihab, 2007, Unconventional Weapons in Islamic Jurisprudence, Faculty of Sharia and Law, Islamic University, Palestine.

ii. Khaled Ben Younes, 2010/2011, The Use of Conventional Weapons in International Humanitarian Law, Faculty of Law, University of Algiers, Algeria.

iii. Ghassan Saeed Jaloud Walid, 2013, The Role of Electronic Warfare in the Arab-Israeli Conflict, An-Najah National University, College of Graduate Studies, Palestine.

- Scientific articles:

i. Adel Ahmed Ibrahim Dereza, 2018, Rulings on the month of arms and their use in Islamic jurisprudence, Al-Zaytoonah University, Al-Zaytoonah University Journal, p. 25, Jordan.

ii. Abdullah bin Ghadran Matar Al-Suhaimi, 2004, Chemical and Biological Weapons, King Khalid University, Teachers College, Educational Research Center, Issue 4.

iii. Sadaqa Yahya Fadel, 2014, Electronic Weapons in the Hands of Political Currents, Prince Saud Al-Faisal Institute for Diplomatic Studies, p. 72.

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Published

2022-12-24 — Updated on 2023-01-04

Versions

How to Cite

Aljasmi, Nouf. (2022) 2023. “International Protection from Unconventional Weapons”. Journal of Legal Sciences 37 (2): 433-66. https://doi.org/10.35246/jols.v37i2.556.

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