TY - JOUR AU - Ronen, Yaël AB - 12-Crawford-Review.qxd 15/11/05 07:24 PM Page 394  REVIEWS OF BOOKS non-international armed conflict. Rather it is treated in much of the literature as an addendum to the main business of international armed conflict. This is to be regretted because significant legal developments have occurred in recent years in this area that cry out for extensive and scholarly academic analysis and systematisation. In The Law of Internal Armed Conflict Lindsay Moir approaches the subject comprehensively and it is for this reason that his book is especially welcomed as a valuable addition to the literature. Moir examines the historical regulation of internal armed conflict; common article  of the Geneva Conventions; Additional Protocol II of ; customary international law of internal armed conflict; human rights and internal armed conflict and finally, implementation and enforcement. Moir locates the development of the law of internal armed conflicts in classical international law in the recognition of the different stages of rebellion, insurgency, and belligerency. He examines the further development of the law through the Geneva Conventions and their Protocols and, more recently, the jurispru- dence of the Yugoslav and Rwandan Tribunals. Unfortunately, this branch of law is (at least from the perspective of victims) TI - Namibia: The Sacred Trust of Civilization, Ideal and Reality. By Bryan O'Linn. Gamsberg: Macmillan, 2003. 392 pp. Nam.$260 JO - The British Yearbook of International Law DO - 10.1093/bybil/75.1.394 DA - 2005-01-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/namibia-the-sacred-trust-of-civilization-ideal-and-reality-by-bryan-o-OPRGOHvmPe SP - 394 EP - 396 VL - 75 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -