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How 20th-century laws of war apply amid 21st-century crises

Two major crises are presenting a values paradox. Humanitarian standards enshrined in two key international conventions after World War II have rarely seemed more relevant: the laws of war U.S. President Joe Biden has repeatedly cited in the conflict in Gaza, and the rules protecting refugees in search of asylum. 

Yet the waging of war and the worldwide flow of refugees look almost unrecognizable from when the Geneva Conventions on protecting civilians in conflict were drafted in 1949, with the United Nations Refugee Convention following two years later. 

Why We Wrote This

The conflicts and refugee crises of 2023 look entirely different from those that drove the postwar adoption of international rights conventions. But an enduring value is getting renewed attention: the responsibility to protect civilians.

Updating the conventions seems almost fanciful in the current geopolitical climate. But the humanitarian truce of recent days in Gaza could turn out to provide a broader model for at least starting to resolve the paradox.

The key in Gaza has been a coming together of the most directly affected parties to focus on what lies at the heart of both conventions: a duty to protect vulnerable civilians endangered by circumstances beyond their control. In Europe, rights groups will be watching closely to see if recognition of that core principle’s enduring power could also inform a more sustainable response on migrants.

If you’re reading this, chances are you’re already aware that Monitor writers around the world strive not just to report the news but also to convey the human stories underneath – and the human values that so often animate them.

Now, however, two major international crises – the war in Gaza, and a surge in migrants from Africa, the Middle East, and Asia desperately trying to enter Europe – are underscoring what might be called a values paradox.

On the one hand, the humanitarian standards enshrined in two key international conventions after World War II have rarely seemed more relevant: the laws of war U.S. President Joe Biden has repeatedly cited in the conflict in Gaza, and the rules protecting refugees in search of asylum.

Why We Wrote This

The conflicts and refugee crises of 2023 look entirely different from those that drove the postwar adoption of international rights conventions. But an enduring value is getting renewed attention: the responsibility to protect civilians.

Yet applying these decades-old commitments to the dramatically altered conditions of our 21st-century world is proving ever more complex and difficult.

The waging of war and the worldwide flow of refugees look almost unrecognizable from when the Geneva Conventions on protecting civilians in conflict were drafted in 1949, and when the United Nations Refugee Convention came into being two years later.

The prospect of bringing the world together to update them looks almost fanciful in today’s geopolitical climate. It’s marked by growing great-power tensions and a Global South increasingly determined to make its independent voice heard, while many democracies are increasingly preoccupied with angry political divisions at home.

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