Book

The Prohibition of Enforced Disappearances: A Meaningful Example of a Partial Merger between Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law

In: 'Research Handbook on Human Rights and Humanitarian Law', E. Elgar 2013, pp. 320-342
Author
Gloria Gaggioli
Publication Year
2013
Region
Global
Thematic Area
Law & Policies
Topic
Enforced Disappearance / Detention / Criminal Justice
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The phenomenon of enforced disappearances is not new. It is generally claimed that Hitler’s Nacht und Nebel decree, which provided for enforced disappearance of ‘undesirable elements’, was one of its first formulation. Enforced disappearances have been practised on a large scale in Latin America. This phenomenon has not yet been eradicated; the practice of secret detentions by the United States of America in the context of the ‘war on terror’ is just one of many recent examples.

This chapter will present successively how IHL, HRL and international criminal law contributed, in their own way, to the prohibition and criminalization of enforced disappearances. It will show that these bodies of law are complementary and that their mutual influence allowed a progressive enhancement of the legal protection of persons against enforced disappearances. Finally, it will show how the merger of the rules belonging to these different bodies of law into the Convention against Enforced Disappearances contributed to strengthen the prohibition of enforced disappearances in international law.