This book explores a number of legal issued raised by the introduction of emerging technologies--such as autonomous weapons, artificial intelligence, and cyber capabilities--on the modern battlefield. Is the law as it exists today capable of regulating these new weapons? How might the law be changed to address these new and emerging capabilities? This book will shape the debate on how the law of armed conflict should be changed, or could be adapted, to address the challenges posed by the use of emerging technologies in modern warfare.
This book explores a number of legal issued raised by the introduction of emerging technologies--such as autonomous weapons, artificial intelligence, and cyber capabilities--on the modern battlefield. Is the law as it exists today capable of regulating these new weapons? How might the law be changed to address these new and emerging capabilities? This book will shape the debate on how the law of armed conflict should be changed, or could be adapted, to address the challenges posed by the use of emerging technologies in modern warfare.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Ronald T. P. Alcala is Academy Professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Eric Talbot Jensen is Professor of Law and Brigham Young University Law School.
Inhaltsangabe
* Foreword by Brigadier General R. Patrick Huston * Contributors * Introduction * PART ONE Compliance and Accountability * Chapter 1. Regulating New Weapons Technology * Rebecca Crootof * Chapter 2. Assessing LOAC Compliance and Discourse as New Technologies Emerge: From Effects Driven Analysis to "What Effects?" * Laurie R. Blank * Chapter 3. Leveraging Emerging Technology for LOAC Compliance * Eric Talbot Jensen and Alan Hickey * Chapter 4. Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems: The Overlooked Importance of Administrative Accountability * Laura A. Dickinson * PART TWO Precautions * Chapter 5. Law-of-War Precautions: A Cautionary Note * Sean Watts * Chapter 6. The Other Side of Autonomous Weapons: Using Artificial Intelligence to Enhance IHL Compliance * Peter Margulies * Chapter 7. High Tech Civilians, Participation in Hostilities, and Criminal Liability: Reconciling U.S. Perspectives * Lieutenant Colonel Matthew T. King * PART THREE Distinction * Chapter 8. Emerging Technologies and the Principle of Distinction: A Further Blurring of the Lines between Combatants and Civilians? * Michael W. Meier * Chapter 9. Who Did It? Attribution of Cyber Intrusions and the Jus in Bello * William Banks * Chapter 10. The Law of Armed Conflict Implications of Covered or Concealed Cyber Operations: Perfidy, Ruses, and the Principle of Passive Distinction * Colonel Gary P. Corn and Commander Peter P. Pascucci * Chapter 11. Invisible Soldiers: The Perfidy Implications of Invisibility Technology on Battlefields of the Future * Sephora Sultana and Hitoshi Nasu * Chapter 12. Attack Decision-Making: Context, Reasonableness, and the Duty to Obey * Geoffrey S. Corn * Index
* Foreword by Brigadier General R. Patrick Huston * Contributors * Introduction * PART ONE Compliance and Accountability * Chapter 1. Regulating New Weapons Technology * Rebecca Crootof * Chapter 2. Assessing LOAC Compliance and Discourse as New Technologies Emerge: From Effects Driven Analysis to "What Effects?" * Laurie R. Blank * Chapter 3. Leveraging Emerging Technology for LOAC Compliance * Eric Talbot Jensen and Alan Hickey * Chapter 4. Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems: The Overlooked Importance of Administrative Accountability * Laura A. Dickinson * PART TWO Precautions * Chapter 5. Law-of-War Precautions: A Cautionary Note * Sean Watts * Chapter 6. The Other Side of Autonomous Weapons: Using Artificial Intelligence to Enhance IHL Compliance * Peter Margulies * Chapter 7. High Tech Civilians, Participation in Hostilities, and Criminal Liability: Reconciling U.S. Perspectives * Lieutenant Colonel Matthew T. King * PART THREE Distinction * Chapter 8. Emerging Technologies and the Principle of Distinction: A Further Blurring of the Lines between Combatants and Civilians? * Michael W. Meier * Chapter 9. Who Did It? Attribution of Cyber Intrusions and the Jus in Bello * William Banks * Chapter 10. The Law of Armed Conflict Implications of Covered or Concealed Cyber Operations: Perfidy, Ruses, and the Principle of Passive Distinction * Colonel Gary P. Corn and Commander Peter P. Pascucci * Chapter 11. Invisible Soldiers: The Perfidy Implications of Invisibility Technology on Battlefields of the Future * Sephora Sultana and Hitoshi Nasu * Chapter 12. Attack Decision-Making: Context, Reasonableness, and the Duty to Obey * Geoffrey S. Corn * Index
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