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Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law

This master thesis gives a comprehensive overview of the protection of journalists and media facilities in times of armed conflict. First, the thesis analyses, which legal regimes are applicable: international humanitarian or human rights law. In conclusion, it suggests a parallel application of bot...

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Main Author: Seppelt, Rosalie
Other Authors: Woolaver, Hannah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Law 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Seppelt, Rosalie
author2 Woolaver, Hannah
author_browse Seppelt, Rosalie
Woolaver, Hannah
author_facet Woolaver, Hannah
Seppelt, Rosalie
author_sort Seppelt, Rosalie
collection Thesis
description This master thesis gives a comprehensive overview of the protection of journalists and media facilities in times of armed conflict. First, the thesis analyses, which legal regimes are applicable: international humanitarian or human rights law. In conclusion, it suggests a parallel application of both regimes while international humanitarian law is to be regarded as lex specialis in the event of an armed conflict. In the case of a discrepancy between norms of the two regulatory complexes, the lex specialis maxim solves the inconsistency as an interpretation rule. Thus, the human rights provision is interpreted in the light of the more specific humanitarian law provision. Secondly, the thesis examines the concrete norms under both legal regimes that protect journalists and media facilities. It finds that only human rights norms protect the work of journalists while international humanitarian law protects journalists as civilians and media facilities as civilian objects. In the event, that a (fatal) military attack on journalists or media facilities is justifiable under international humanitarian law, there exists a controversy with the right to life guaranteed in human rights law which is solved by means of the lex specialis principle. Finally, the extent of the de facto protection of journalists and media facilities in comparison to the assured de jure protection is tested. For this purpose, the effective protection of journalists and media facilities in general during the current South Sudan crisis is analysed as well as the protection of female journalists against gender-based rights violations in times of armed conflict. A huge discrepancy between the de jure granted protection and the actual protection is found in both cases. Therefore, this thesis stresses the need to adopt new binding international regulations specifically tailored to afford all journalists and media facilities the highest protection possible – especially in times of conflict.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Public Law
publisherStr Department of Public Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31234 Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law Seppelt, Rosalie Woolaver, Hannah Human Rights Law This master thesis gives a comprehensive overview of the protection of journalists and media facilities in times of armed conflict. First, the thesis analyses, which legal regimes are applicable: international humanitarian or human rights law. In conclusion, it suggests a parallel application of both regimes while international humanitarian law is to be regarded as lex specialis in the event of an armed conflict. In the case of a discrepancy between norms of the two regulatory complexes, the lex specialis maxim solves the inconsistency as an interpretation rule. Thus, the human rights provision is interpreted in the light of the more specific humanitarian law provision. Secondly, the thesis examines the concrete norms under both legal regimes that protect journalists and media facilities. It finds that only human rights norms protect the work of journalists while international humanitarian law protects journalists as civilians and media facilities as civilian objects. In the event, that a (fatal) military attack on journalists or media facilities is justifiable under international humanitarian law, there exists a controversy with the right to life guaranteed in human rights law which is solved by means of the lex specialis principle. Finally, the extent of the de facto protection of journalists and media facilities in comparison to the assured de jure protection is tested. For this purpose, the effective protection of journalists and media facilities in general during the current South Sudan crisis is analysed as well as the protection of female journalists against gender-based rights violations in times of armed conflict. A huge discrepancy between the de jure granted protection and the actual protection is found in both cases. Therefore, this thesis stresses the need to adopt new binding international regulations specifically tailored to afford all journalists and media facilities the highest protection possible – especially in times of conflict. 2020-02-21T13:47:13Z 2020-02-21T13:47:13Z 2019 2020-02-21T09:07:32Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31234 eng application/pdf Department of Public Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Human Rights Law
Seppelt, Rosalie
Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law
title_full Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law
title_fullStr Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law
title_full_unstemmed Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law
title_short Media and Armed Conflict: Protection of Journalists and Media Facilities under Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law
title_sort media and armed conflict protection of journalists and media facilities under human rights law and international humanitarian law
topic Human Rights Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31234
work_keys_str_mv AT seppeltrosalie mediaandarmedconflictprotectionofjournalistsandmediafacilitiesunderhumanrightslawandinternationalhumanitarianlaw