Revisiting the Notion of ‘Intensity’ Inherent in Common Article 3: An Examination of the Minimum Threshold Which Satisfies the Notion of ‘Intensity’ and a Discussion of the Possibility of Applying a Method of Cumulative Assessment

Author:

Bradley Martha M.1

Affiliation:

1. South African Research Chair in International Law, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg , South Africa

Abstract

Summary The 2016 ICRC Commentaries reveal an appreciation that the intensity of violence test which is included in the Common Article 3 understanding of the notion of ‘intensity’ has arrived at a point at which situations formerly regarded as instances of ‘sporadic violence’ have become so violent as to be reclassified as armed conflict not of an international character in that the situation resembles ‘protracted armed violence’. The difficulty lies in determining whether a lower intensity situation is sufficiently violent to constitute a Common Article 3-type non-international armed conflict. The minimum threshold test in relation to the notion of ‘intensity’ in Common Article 3 pertinently is concerned with the relationship between the terms ‘duration’ and ‘intensity’. At what point has a violent situation lasted long enough to exceed our understanding of the meaning of ‘sporadic’ and, thus, has become a non-international armed conflict? Is the method of assessing the level of violence in the context of Common Article 3 limited to a bilateral approach or is an aggregate assessment framework permissible as an application in border-line low-intensity non-international armed conflicts? These questions illustrate the importance of gaining a comprehensive understanding of the phrase ‘protracted armed violence’.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Law

Reference58 articles.

1. AKANDE, D. ‘Classification of Armed Conflicts: Relevant Legal Concepts’. In WILMSHURST, E (ed). International Law and the Classification of Conflicts. Oxford University Press, 201210.2139/ssrn.2132573

2. AMBOS, K. ‘Chapter III: War Crimes’. In AMBOS, K. Treatise on International Criminal Law; Volume II; The Crimes and Sentencing. Oxford University Press, 201410.1093/law/9780199657926.001.0001

3. BELLAL, Annyssa. ‘ICRC Commentary of Common Article 3: Some Questions Relating to Organized Armed Groups and the Applicability of IHL’ [online] Available at: Accessed 5 October 2017

4. BELLAL, Annyssa (ed). The War Report 2014. Oxford University Press, 2015

5. BRADLEY, Martha M. ‘An Analysis of the Notion “Organised Armed Group” and the Notion of “Intensity” in the Law of Non-International Armed Conflict’, 20 November 2017 (on file with the author)

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