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Defensive Humanitarianism
Author(s) -
Holden Zimmerman
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
undergraduate research journal for the humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2473-2788
DOI - 10.17161/1808.26397
Subject(s) - belligerent , diplomacy , state (computer science) , neutrality , political science , prisoners of war , law , foreign policy , government (linguistics) , international humanitarian law , economic history , public administration , international law , world war ii , history , philosophy , linguistics , algorithm , politics , computer science
During World War I, the Swiss state interned nearly 30,000 foreign soldiers who had previously been held in POW camps in Germany, France, Britain, Belgium, Austria, and Russia. The internment camp system that Switzerland implemented arose from the Swiss diplomatic platform of defensive humanitarianism. By offering good offices to the belligerent states of WWI, the Swiss state utilized humanitarian law both to secure Swiss neutrality and to alleviate, to a degree, the immense human suffering of the war. The Swiss government mixed domestic security concerns with international diplomacy and humanitarianism. They elevated a domestic policy platform to the international diplomatic level and succeeded in building enough trust between the party states to create an internment system that reconceptualized the treatment of foreign soldiers from the holding of prisoners to the healing of men.

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