Introduction
5.5 The Extraterritorial Scope of International Legal Obligations: Understanding Jurisdiction
A State must comply with its obligations under IHL beyond its own territory. As the purpose of IHL is to regulate the conduct of one or more States involved in an international (i.e., inter-State) armed conflict on the territory of another, there is no question that IHL applies to a State's extraterritorial conduct, though the extent of the geographic reach of IHL applicability is not unlimited. The same holds true for non-international (i.e., non-inter-State) armed conflict: the rules of IHL reflect 'elementary considerations of humanity' and are applicable under customary international law to any conflict, whether international or non-international. Parties to a conflict 'cannot be absolved of their IHL obligations when the conflict reaches beyond the territory of a single State'.
Under IHRL, the matter is more complex. For a State to have human rights duties towards persons (including persons who are not citizens of that State), and for persons to have human rights enforced by and against that State, that State must have jurisdiction (i.e., 'authority, responsibility or control') over those persons or the space they inhabit. States' jurisdiction under IHRL is different from: