The impact of emerging technologies on the law of armed conflict

Author(s)

    • Jensen, Eric Talbot
    • Alcala, Ronald T. P.
    • Lieber Institute for Law and Land Warfare (United States Military Academy)

Bibliographic Information

The impact of emerging technologies on the law of armed conflict

volume editors, Eric Talbot Jensen, Ronald T. P. Alcala

(The Lieber studies, v. 2)

Oxford University Press, c2019

Available at  / 6 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Contents of Works

  • Foreword / Brigadier General R. Patrick Huston
  • Regulating new weapons technology / Rebecca Crootof
  • Assessing LOAC compliance and discourse as new technologies emerge : from effects driven analysis to "what effects?" / Laurie R. Blank
  • Leveraging emerging technology for LOAC compliance / Eric Talbot Jensen and Alan Hickey
  • Lethal autonomous weapons systems : the overlooked importance of administrative accountability / Laura A. Dickinson
  • Law-of-war precautions : a cautionary note / Sean Watts
  • The other side of autonomous weapons : using artificial intelligence to enhance IHL compliance / Peter Margulies
  • High tech civilians, participation in hostilities, and criminal liability : reconciling U.S. perspectives / Lieutenant Colonel Matthew T. King
  • Emerging technologies and the principle of distinction : a further blurring of the lines between combatants and civilians? / Michael W. Meier
  • Who did it? : attribution of cyber intrusions and the jus in bello / William Banks
  • The law of armed conflict implications of covered or concealed cyber operations : perfidy, ruses, and the principle of passive distinction / Colonel Gary P. Corn & Commander Peter P. Pascucci
  • Invisible soldiers : the perfidy implications of invisibility technology on battlefields of the future / Sephora Sultana & Hitoshi Nasu
  • Attack decision-making : context, reasonableness, and the duty to obey / Geoffrey S. Corn

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top