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Article contents
The Impact of Human Rights Law on Armed Forces , by Peter Rowe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006, xi + 249 + (index) 10pp. (£24.99 paperback and £55 hardback). ISBN 0-521-61732-4 and 0-521-85170-X.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
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- Copyright © Society of Legal Scholars 2007
References
13. Grigoriades v Greece (1997) 27 EHRR 464, para. 45, with reference to freedom of expression under Art. 10 of the European Convention.
14. See e.g. R.J. Toney and S.N. Anwar, “International Human Rights Law and Military Personnel: A Look Behind the Barrack Walls” (1998) 14 American University International Law Review, 519–543, where the authors analyse some human rights abuses in the training of military personnel.
15. See UK Parliament, House of Commons Hansard Debates for 28 June 1989, Col. 1066, available online at: http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm198889/cmhansrd/1989-06-28/Debate-15.html (date last accessed 30/10/06).
16. See J.K. Whither, “Battling Bullying in the British Army 1987–2004, (2004) The Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies, Issue 1, Article No. 7, http://www.pipss.org/sommaire190.html, p.1. (date last accessed 30/10/06).
17. See e.g. Human Rights Committee Decision in S. W. M. Broeks v. The Netherlands, Communication No. 172/1984, U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/OP/2 at 196 (1990).
18. Ibid., para. 13.
19. General B. R. McCaffery, “Role of the Armed Forces in the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights” (1995) 149 Military Law Review 229–239 at 237.