Stephen C. Neff
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Medieval roots
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The medieval Christian world held neutrality in low esteem. It could hardly do otherwise, given the prevailing concept of war in Christian thought as a contest between justice and injustice. True to their intellectual heritage of just-war ideas, neither Gentili nor Grotius had a strong conception of a set of rights of neutrals as such. Neutrals were nevertheless recognised as having rights of a sort: the basic rights which natural law accorded to persons and states generally. The so-called 'rights' of neutrals comprised, in reality, an alliance between general natural-law rights and the freedom of action 'left over' when the rights of belligerents came to a stop. Even with the evolution of these sets of basic rights and duties of neutrals and belligerents, a host of practical problems remained relating to their exercise in practice.

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