From Syrian civilians locked in iron cages to veterans joining peaceful indigenous water protectors at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, from Sri Lanka to Iraq and from Yemen to the United States, human beings have been used as shields for protection, coercion, or deterrence. Over the past decade, human shields have also appeared with increasing frequency in antinuclear struggles, civil and environmental protests, and even computer games. The phenomenon, however, is by no means a new one.
Describing the use of human shields in key historical and contemporary moments across the globe, Neve Gordon and Nicola Perugini demonstrate how the increasing weaponization of human beings has made the position of civilians trapped in theaters of violence more precarious and their lives more expendable. They show how the law facilitates the use of lethal violence against vulnerable people while portraying it as humane, but they also reveal how people can and do use their own vulnerability to resist violence and denounce forms of dehumanization. Ultimately, Human Shields unsettles our common ethical assumptions about violence and the law and urges us to imagine entirely new forms of humane politics.
Nicola Perugini is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Edinburgh. He is the coauthor of The Human Right to Dominate.
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Review of Neve Gordon and Nicola Perugini's book by @NikuJafarnia: 'Human Shields: A History of People in the Line of Fire,' explains that historically and presently colonized individuals have continued to be excluded from civilian status. https://t.co/ACH86fmt3Q
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Human Shields reviewed: Neve Gordon and Nicola Perugini explore how the use of human shielding unsettles our understanding of the ethics of war https://t.co/oLk55FbVTK
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Decades of repetition, without any significant state or non-state challenge, have created a customary legal consensus whereby the human shields provisions can be used to justify the killing of civilians. — #AJOpinion by Neve Gordon & Nicola Perugini ⤵️ https://t.co/nQE3xcSM41
"The human shield faces us; we are its audience. The key contribution of this timely book is to elucidate that speech acts about human shielding authorize some forms of action and enable particular constellations of actors while delegitimizing and disabling others."
-- "Los Angeles Review of Books""A compelling, thoughtful, and ambitious book, which successfully takes a novel - if troubling- micro-issue of conflict and explores it through a macro multi-disciplinary lens."
-- "Peace & Change""Excellent analysis of shielding in international humanitarian law. . . . While by far the best analysis of the subject so far, their book should inspire other scholars to think even more deeply about the humanization of human shielding at a time of global fracture."
-- "International Politics Reviews"