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Description
This chapter addresses a particularly vulnerable population of children, namely, children associated with armed forces or armed groups. These children are colloquially known as child soldiers. This chapter begins by surveying the prevalence of child soldiering globally. It then sets out the considerable amount of international law that addresses children in armed conflict, in particular, the law that allocates responsibility for child soldiering and the law that sets out the responsibility of child soldiers for their conduct. The chapter identifies significant gaps between the law and the securing of positive outcomes for former child soldiers, notably when it comes to post-conflict reintegration. The protective impulse that envisions militarized youth as faultless passive victims may not always reflect how youthful fighters see themselves nor necessarily support an emancipatory and empowering vision of how international law should promote the rights of children.
ISBN
9780190097608
Publication Date
2020
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Disciplines
Human Rights Law | International Humanitarian Law | International Law | Juvenile Law | Law | Military, War, and Peace
Repository Citation
Mark A. Drumbl, Children in Armed Conflict, in The Oxford Handbook of Children’s Rights Law (Jonathan Todres & Shani M. King eds., 2020),
https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/fac_books/125
Included in
Human Rights Law Commons, International Humanitarian Law Commons, International Law Commons, Juvenile Law Commons, Military, War, and Peace Commons