THE PROMISE AND PRACTICE OF VOLUNTARY INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW REPORTING
INSIGHTS FROM CANADA’S EXPERIENCE
Abstract
This contribution examines the emerging practice of voluntary International Humanitarian Law (IHL) implementation reporting through a critical assessment of Canada’s first report released in September 2024. Voluntary IHL reports, which gained momentum following the 33rd International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent in 2019, serve as significant transparency mechanisms in a field that suffers from insufficient monitoring systems. The first section explores the multifaceted value of these reports. It argues that they enhance transparency, facilitate peer learning, contribute to normative development of customary IHL, improve administrative efficiency through institutional memory, and offer strategic advantages in countering skepticism about IHL’s effectiveness. Canada’s report exemplifies how these instruments work in practice, providing a structured overview of its legal framework across five key areas including implementation, dissemination, jurisdiction, protections, and means of warfare.
While Canada’s report provides a comprehensive outline of its legal framework, the second section of this article identifies significant gaps in its approach. The report lacks essential evidence-based assessment, omitting the quantitative and qualitative data necessary to evaluate implementation effectiveness beyond formal structures. It eschews self-critical reflection and future planning elements that would transform it from a mere showcase of achievements into a genuine tool for improvement. The analysis identifies several notable blind spots and offers suggestions for more comprehensive reports in the future.
The contribution concludes that while Canada’s report represents important progress, future iterations should embrace more comprehensive, candid, and inclusive approaches to fulfill the potential of voluntary IHL reporting.
Keywords:
international humanitarian law, voluntary reports, implementation reports, law of armed conflict, CanadaDownloads
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