Author Archives: Anna Chotzen

About Anna Chotzen

Alumna of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and an honors graduate of the Department of History. Her essay in Humanity 5.1 was originally submitted as a longer work for her honors thesis. She has been the recipient of several awards and a fellowship for this essay, including the Hilldale Undergraduate/Faculty Research Fellowship, with which she conducted archival research, and the Fred Harvey Harrington Prize for best undergraduate history thesis. She was also the recipient of a FLAS Fellowship for Arabic.

BEYOND BOUNDS: MOROCCO’S RIF WAR AND THE LIMITS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW

This article examines the failure of international humanitarian law to sufficiently regulate the use of advanced military technologies, specifically in conflicts between sovereign and non-sovereign actors. This failure is twofold. First, the regulation of weapons consistently lags behind their development and use. Second, international humanitarian law generally excludes non-sovereign actors from its jurisdiction. Juxtaposing the 1925 Geneva Gas Protocol with the contemporaneous Moroccan Rif War reveals loopholes in international humanitarian law that enable major powers to enjoy unrestricted use of advanced military technologies toward imperial ends. This article contends that the failure to regulate chemical warfare in the 1920s has significant parallels with the nebulous legal status of drone warfare today. Continue reading →