tsiviilelanikkonna
Tsiviilelanikkonna (Estonian for civilian population) refers to the non‑combatant residents of a state or territory who are not members of the armed forces or organized armed groups. In international humanitarian law, civilians are protected persons who must be distinguished from combatants during armed conflict. This protection covers safety from violence, coercion, and collective punishment, and it guarantees access to humanitarian aid and essential services. Civilian status is determined by function rather than by ethnicity or nationality; individuals who directly participate in hostilities may temporarily lose protection for that period.
In practice, civilian populations can be affected by war through casualties, displacement, damage to homes and
Legal frameworks: The Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols provide protections for civilians in armed conflict
Measuring and protecting tsiviilelanikkonna involves humanitarian access, civilian casualty reporting, displacement tracking, and adherence to core