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A Socio-Legal History of the Laws of War
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24 August 2023

Since the Second World War, international laws governing the conduct of war and the behaviour of soldiers on the field of battle have been of strong academic and legal interest. Yet while they have seen their strongest articulation and enforcement in the contemporary era, rules governing such conduct are deeply rooted in human history.
Beginning with the origins of organized warfare in the ancient world, A Socio-Legal History of the Laws of War: Constraining Carnage traces key structural and cultural changes through multiple historical contexts, highlighting various approaches to the nature and purpose of war, as well as the roles of both bystanders and participants. Where other scholarship has focused on the legality of war itself, Christopher W. Mullins concentrates on rules surrounding the behaviour of soldiers and commanders in the field while also demonstrating how these issues have transformed over time.
Rooted in critical historical documents from the Tudors to the American Revolution, this rich history, the first of two volumes, provides a cogent understanding of how the current historical moment has developed, as well as of the potential paths that lie ahead.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Crime and criminology, HISTORY / Military / General, LAW / Criminal Law / General, Legal aspects of criminology, Interdisciplinary studies
Christopher W. Mullins is Associate Dean of Academic and Student Affairs for the College of Health and Human Services and Professor in the school of Justice and Public Safety at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, USA. His research focuses on the structural, cultural, and legal aspects of violence, especially mass atrocity.
Chapter 1. The Rules of Warfare
Chapter 2. War in the Prehistoric and Ancient Worlds
Chapter 3. The Roman Republic and Empire
Chapter 4. The Early Medieval World
Chapter 5. The Late Medieval World
Chapter 6. Early Modern Wars and the Birth of the Law of Nations