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New Technologies and the Law in War and Peace
Cambridge University Press, 12/20/2018
EAN 9781108497534, ISBN10: 1108497535
Hardcover, 450 pages, 23.5 x 15.8 x 3 cm
Language: English
Policymakers, legislators, scientists, thinkers, military strategists, academics, and all those interested in understanding the future want to know how twenty-first century scientific advance should be regulated in war and peace. This book tries to provide some of the answers. Part I summarises some important elements of the relevant law. In Part II, individual chapters are devoted to cyber capabilities, highly automated and autonomous systems, human enhancement technologies, human degradation techniques, the regulation of nanomaterials, novel naval technologies, outer space, synthetic brain technologies beyond artificial intelligence, and biometrics. The final part of the book notes important synergies that emerge between the different technologies and legal provisions, existing and proposed, assesses notions of convergence and of composition in international law, and provides some concluding remarks. The new technologies, their uses, and their regulation in war and peace are presented to the reader who is invited to draw conclusions.
Part I
1. Introduction William H. Boothby
2. Regulating new weapon technologies William H. Boothby
3. The law on the conduct of hostilities William H. Boothby
4. Non-LOAC governed deployment of military technologies
some regulatory touchstones Rob McLaughlin
Part II
5. Cyber capabilities William H. Boothby
6. Highly automated and autonomous technologies William H. Boothby
7. Military human enhancement Ioana Maria Puscas
8. Legal aspects of human enhancement technologies Heather A. Harrison Dinniss
9. Human degradation technologies and international law Harry Aitken and Hitoshi Nasu
10. Nanomaterials
a tale of two applications Kobi Leins and Diana M. Bowman
11. Naval technologies Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg
12. Outer space Melissa de Zwart
13. Synthetic brain technologies
beyond artificial intelligence David P. Fidler
14. Biometrics William H. Boothby
15. So, what do we make of all this? William H. Boothby.