Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 January 2010
The protection of refugees and displaced persons is guaranteed by many universal and regional instruments of international law. The rules are there, but for several years the humanitarian organizations charged with implementing them have constantly had to face new situations brought about by the scale and frequency of mass population movements, especially in the Third World, and new types of violence which affect both the status and the possibilities for protection of the people concerned. Very often, the solutions arrived at by these bodies have taken the form of assistance rather than protection, the one not always easily distinguishable from the other.
1 See Jean-Luc Blondel, “Assistance to protected persons”, International Review of the Red Cross, No. 260, 09–10 1987, pp. 451–468.Google Scholar
2 Twenty-fourth International Conference of the Red Cross, Manila, 1981, Resolution XXI: “International Red Cross aid to refugees”.
3 “Opening message to the Second World Red Cross and Red Crescent Conference on Peace”, by Alexandre Hay, President of the ICRC, IRRC, No. 243, 11–12 1984, p. 325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar