Moderator:John Sims, Professor of Law, University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law This panel will focus on the bearing of human rights norms on the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in armed conflict situations. The ongoing and rapidly increasing development and deployment of UAVs in situations of armed conflict have arguably outpaced the law in that they are not adequately supported by a dedicated and enforceable regime of international and (trans)national rules, regulations, and standards, including relevant human rights norms. In addressing this issue, the panel will explore the role human rights norms play or should play in guiding and regulating the use of UAVs for military purposes, both with respect to surveillance operat...
Book Chapter Mary Ellen O\u27Connell, Banning Autonomous Killing, in The American Way of Bombing: Ho...
“[I]n all of our operations involving the use of force, including those in the armed conflict with A...
The first of a two-part series on the legality and ethics of targeted killing, this paper closely ex...
Moderator:John Sims, Professor of Law, University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law This panel ...
Moderator:John Sims, Professor of Law, University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law This panel ...
The United States employing armed unmanned aerial systems (UAS) or “drones” against al qaeda and Tal...
The current generation of UVs is remotely operated, sometimes from a close distance, sometimes over ...
While supporters claim that drone warfare is not only legal but ethical and wise, others have sugges...
We live in a world of constant technological change; and with this change, comes unknown effects and...
This is a submission to the Joint Committee on Human Rights on the UK Government's Policy on the Use...
This thesis introduces the notion of dehumanisation, elucidates its relationship with detachment and...
This article provides a holistic examination of the international legal frameworks which regulate ta...
This qualitative research study directly analyzes the legality of drone usage. This project discusse...
Ongoing meetings of the United Nations in Geneva regarding the Convention on Certain Conventional We...
Explores a variety of ways of thinking ethically about drone violenceExplores how drone violence wor...
Book Chapter Mary Ellen O\u27Connell, Banning Autonomous Killing, in The American Way of Bombing: Ho...
“[I]n all of our operations involving the use of force, including those in the armed conflict with A...
The first of a two-part series on the legality and ethics of targeted killing, this paper closely ex...
Moderator:John Sims, Professor of Law, University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law This panel ...
Moderator:John Sims, Professor of Law, University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law This panel ...
The United States employing armed unmanned aerial systems (UAS) or “drones” against al qaeda and Tal...
The current generation of UVs is remotely operated, sometimes from a close distance, sometimes over ...
While supporters claim that drone warfare is not only legal but ethical and wise, others have sugges...
We live in a world of constant technological change; and with this change, comes unknown effects and...
This is a submission to the Joint Committee on Human Rights on the UK Government's Policy on the Use...
This thesis introduces the notion of dehumanisation, elucidates its relationship with detachment and...
This article provides a holistic examination of the international legal frameworks which regulate ta...
This qualitative research study directly analyzes the legality of drone usage. This project discusse...
Ongoing meetings of the United Nations in Geneva regarding the Convention on Certain Conventional We...
Explores a variety of ways of thinking ethically about drone violenceExplores how drone violence wor...
Book Chapter Mary Ellen O\u27Connell, Banning Autonomous Killing, in The American Way of Bombing: Ho...
“[I]n all of our operations involving the use of force, including those in the armed conflict with A...
The first of a two-part series on the legality and ethics of targeted killing, this paper closely ex...