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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
What You Should Know About Landmine Victims, Margaret S. Busé
What You Should Know About Landmine Victims, Margaret S. Busé
The Journal of Conventional Weapons Destruction
One million people have been killed and maimed by anti-personnel mines. Twenty-six thousand people a year become victims, 70 people a day, or around one person every 15 minutes. Three hundred thousand children and counting are severely disabled because of landmines. Half the people who step on an anti-personnel mine die from their injuries before they are found or taken to hospital. An even higher percentage of children die because, being smaller, their vital organs are closer to the blast. After the end of hostilities, decades afterwards, anyone who strays into a mine field is at risk. Everyone is vulnerable: …
A Promise To Our Children, Charles E. Maccormack
A Promise To Our Children, Charles E. Maccormack
The Journal of Conventional Weapons Destruction
On May 22, 1999, President Clinton announced a decision on anti-personnel landmines that commits the United States to sign the Ottawa Treaty by the year 2006. With this initiative, Clinton cleared the way for the United States to join the more than 120 nations that already have signed the treaty, which is an international agreement that bans the stockpiling, use, and import and export of anti-personnel landmines. This is welcome news for the children, families and communities whose daily lives are affected by the scourge of landmines.
Journal Of Mine Action, Issue 3.3 (1999), Cisr Journal
Journal Of Mine Action, Issue 3.3 (1999), Cisr Journal
The Journal of Conventional Weapons Destruction
Victim & Survivor Assistance | Notes from the Field | Organization Profiles
The Devastating Effects Of Landmines: The Landmine Problem In The Sudan, Dennis Barlow
The Devastating Effects Of Landmines: The Landmine Problem In The Sudan, Dennis Barlow
The Journal of Conventional Weapons Destruction
Sudan truly illustrates the broad array of horrors that can be visited on a society as a result of landmine-related problems. While we are often haunted by the image of a small child who has experienced the agony of a landmine injury, the cumulative problems caused by landmines typically do not end with the personal, physical, or even mental trauma of an individual. Invariably the net effect of multiple and frequent accidents is to inflict societal trauma, via infrastructure and economic damage, on the country at large. These burdens, shouldered by a country already struggling for survival, can eventually spell …