Abstract
AbstractThis article reconsiders the status and legality of both autonomous and remote weapons systems under international humanitarian law. Technologically advanced unmanned military systems are being introduced into the modern battlespace with insufficient recognition of their potential challenge to international humanitarian law. The article questions the understanding of both autonomous and remote weapons systems as ‘weapons’ and seeks to consider how their use may impact existing legal categories. Their use is then specifically situated to consider the legality of their deployment in certain contexts. Finally, the article raises the question of impunity for the use of both autonomous and remote weapons systems that arise from the inability to attribute responsibility for the harm they cause. It is imperative that law and policy are developed to govern the development and deployment of these advanced weapons systems to forestall these likely situations of impunity.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
29 articles.
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1. The Attributability of Combatant Status to Military AI Technologies under International Humanitarian Law;Global Society;2023-09-11
2. A Weapon is No Subordinate;Journal of International Criminal Justice;2023-08-03
3. Individual Criminal Responsibility for Autonomous Weapons Systems in International Criminal Law;INT HUMANIT LAW;2023-02-27
4. Introduction;Individual Criminal Responsibility for Autonomous Weapons Systems in International Criminal Law;2023-02-17
5. Autonomous Weapon Systems (AWS);The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Global Security Studies;2023