ABSTRACT

This book explores the role played by civilians in shaping the outcomes of military combat across time and place.

This volume explores the contributions civilians have made to warfare in case studies that range from ancient Europe to contemporary Africa and Latin America. Building on philosophical and legal scholarship, it explores the blurred boundary between combatant and civilian in different historical contexts and examines how the absence of clear demarcations shapes civilian strategic positioning and impacts civilian vulnerability to military targeting and massacre. The book argues that engagement with the blurred boundaries between combatant and non-combatant both advance the key analytical questions that underpin the historical literature on civilians and underline the centrality of civilians to a full understanding of warfare. The volume provides new insight into why civilian death and suffering has been so common, despite widespread beliefs embedded in legal and military codes across time and place that killing civilians is wrong. Ultimately, the case studies in the book show that civilians, while always victims of war, were nevertheless often able to become empowered agents in defending their own lives, and impacting the outcomes of wars. By highlighting civilian military agency and broadening the sense of which actors affect strategic outcomes, the book also contributes to a richer understanding of war itself.

This book will be of much interest to students of military studies, international history, international relations and war and conflict studies.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Blurred boundaries and ambiguous divisions – civilians and combat from ancient times to the present

part I|120 pages

Case studies from the ancient and medieval world

chapter 2|25 pages

Ancient warfare beyond the battle

Populace ravaging and heterosexual rape

chapter 3|13 pages

Prey or participants?

Civilian siege experiences during the First Jewish Revolt

chapter 5|21 pages

Civilians and militia in Ottonian Germany

Warfare in an era of small professional armies

chapter 6|21 pages

The bishop with two hats

Reconciling episcopal and military obligations in Causa 23 of Gratian’s Decretum

part II|116 pages

Case studies from the early modern and modern world

chapter 7|23 pages

“They wanted to make us into real soldiers”

The blurred line between noncombatants and combatants in the Thirty Years War

chapter 9|23 pages

Two kinds of civilians

American encounters with civilians on Kerama Retto and Ie Shima and the end of the Pacific war

chapter 10|25 pages

Civilians and civil wars in West Africa

The cases of Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte d’Ivoire 1

chapter 11|24 pages

When the battlefield meets the playground

How to understand the role of children in contemporary civil wars using the case studies of El Salvador and Mozambique

part III|56 pages

Conceptual and historiographical debates and implications

chapter 13|25 pages

It’s a crime, but is it a blunder?

The efficacy of targeting civilians in war