Printed from: www.icbl.org/tools/banned/bibliography/introduction
In the early 1990s, humanitarian organizations including Human Rights Watch. Physicians for Human Rights and the International Committee of the Red Cross, published some of the first in-depth country studies on the landmine issue. During the same period, sevaral articles by prominent officials and experts, along wirh reports of conference preceedings, helped increase awareness in the international community. The publications listed in "Introduction to Landmines" are focused on the development and history of landmines, the impact of their use, and are designed to provide readers with a good introductory background on the movement to ban them.
Landmines in El Salvador and Nicaragua: The Civilian Victims
Landmines in Cambodia: The Coward's War.
Landmines: A Deadly Legacy
Landmines: Legacy of Conflict
The Land Mine Crisis: A Humanitarian Disaster
War of the Mines: Cambodia, Landmines and the Impoverishment of a Nation
After the Guns Fall Silent: The Enduring Legacy of Landmines
Clearing the Fields: Solutions to the Global Land Mines Crisis
Deaths and injuries caused by landmines in Mozambique
The Technology of Killing: A Military and Political History of Antipersonnel Weapons
Aftermath: The Remnants of War
Jody Williams, 1997 Nobel Peace Prize speech
Rae McGrath (for ICBL), 1997 Nobel Peace Prize speech
Banning anti-personnel mines: the Ottawa treaty explained
The History of Landmines
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