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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2019
Published by Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2018.
1 Examples in this regard include the Confederate forces during the American Civil War, the Boers fighting British forces in South Africa, and the nationalist forces under General Franco in the Spanish Civil War.
2 This is typically examined by reference to whether an armed group can be considered “organized” as defined in the body of international law under consideration.
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9 It may also be important to identify other actors: for instance, looser organizations not typically characterized as armed groups may be relevant in the context of crimes against humanity.
10 Organizing Rebellion, p. 84.
11 This would facilitate, for example, an analysis of whether Free Syrian Army units in Daraa and Homs – or Al Qaeda branches in Afghanistan, Iraq or the Islamic Maghreb – could be considered to form part of the same organization and thus be considered to be one party to an armed conflict.
12 This requires, for example, that in the event of a conflict, rules promulgated by the central organization will take precedence.
13 Organizing Rebellion, p. 303.
14 See, for instance, Sections 9.2 and 10.3.