Advances in science and technology have made it possible to improve the physical and cognitive capabilities of warfighters by biomedical interventions, such as the administration of drugs, the implantation of devices, and the magnetic stimulation of the brain. These advances raise the question as to whether enhanced warfighters ought to be considered weapons, means of warfare, or methods of warfare, for the purposes of the law of armed conflict. An affirmative answer to this question would make human enhancement subject to various restrictions arising from the law of armed conflict as well as arms control law. This article disagrees with the suggestion that enhanced warfighters, or the enhancements themselves, could constitute biological ag...
The aim of war is to inflict death in the greatest number and permanent injury among enemy troops, w...
The article examines the moral questions that arise from the military use of enhancement technologie...
Biological interventions to improve performance, such as amphetamines, have a long history of milita...
Under international law, military medical personnel and facilities must be respected and protected i...
The development of human enhancement (HE) technology has rendered its military potential increasingl...
In the last decade, the world has begun to change, transforming from unipolar to multipolar. The new...
What proper role should considerations of risk, particularly to research subjects, play when it come...
The concepts of means of warfare and combatants are not comparable or on the same scale in IHL. Yet ...
What proper role should considerations of risk, particularly to research subjects, play when it come...
This paper argues that it is permissible for computer scientists and engineers—working with advanced...
Lethal Autonomous Weapons (LAWs) are robotic weapons systems, primarily of value to the military, th...
Seventy years after the adoption of the four Geneva Conventions on 12 August 1949 the changing chara...
Much of the focus in reshaping the law of armed conflict is fixated on the vision of humanizing war,...
C1 - Refereed Journal ArticleNew scientific advances have created previously unheard of possibilitie...
Autonomous weapon systems have been widely debated throughout recent years. This article deals with ...
The aim of war is to inflict death in the greatest number and permanent injury among enemy troops, w...
The article examines the moral questions that arise from the military use of enhancement technologie...
Biological interventions to improve performance, such as amphetamines, have a long history of milita...
Under international law, military medical personnel and facilities must be respected and protected i...
The development of human enhancement (HE) technology has rendered its military potential increasingl...
In the last decade, the world has begun to change, transforming from unipolar to multipolar. The new...
What proper role should considerations of risk, particularly to research subjects, play when it come...
The concepts of means of warfare and combatants are not comparable or on the same scale in IHL. Yet ...
What proper role should considerations of risk, particularly to research subjects, play when it come...
This paper argues that it is permissible for computer scientists and engineers—working with advanced...
Lethal Autonomous Weapons (LAWs) are robotic weapons systems, primarily of value to the military, th...
Seventy years after the adoption of the four Geneva Conventions on 12 August 1949 the changing chara...
Much of the focus in reshaping the law of armed conflict is fixated on the vision of humanizing war,...
C1 - Refereed Journal ArticleNew scientific advances have created previously unheard of possibilitie...
Autonomous weapon systems have been widely debated throughout recent years. This article deals with ...
The aim of war is to inflict death in the greatest number and permanent injury among enemy troops, w...
The article examines the moral questions that arise from the military use of enhancement technologie...
Biological interventions to improve performance, such as amphetamines, have a long history of milita...