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2 produkter
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This open access book explores the multifaceted implications of military AI across a broad spectrum of applications, including autonomous weapon systems, decision-support technologies, and AI-augmented human capabilities. Building on the work of the DILEMA project on Designing International Law and Ethics into Military Artificial Intelligence, this book critically examines how AI reshapes core concepts such as agency, responsibility, and control. It identifies the need for innovative governance mechanisms, ethically-informed technical design, robust frameworks for legal compliance and accountability, and clearly articulated normative limitations to the use of AI. By bridging disciplines such as international law, philosophy of technology, science and technology studies, cognitive and behavioural science, international relations, systems engineering, and computer science, this volume offers an essential contribution to understanding how AI is reconfiguring the principles and practices of modern warfare. Designed for scholars, policymakers, military professionals, and technologists, this book provides cutting-edge insights into the promises and perils of military AI and proposes pathways for responsible integration of these transformative technologies.Bérénice Boutin is affiliated to the T.M.C. Asser Instituut in the Hague, The Netherlands and the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Taylor Kate Woodcock is affiliated to the T.M.C. Asser Instituut in the Hague, The Netherlands and the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; and Sadjad Soltanzadeh is affiliated to the Philosophy Department of the University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands.
Netherlands Yearbook of International Law 2023
General Principles of Law: More than a Gap-Filler?
Inbunden, Engelska, 2026
2 600 kr
Kommande
This volume of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law (NYIL), is situated in the wider discussion on general principles reignited by the recent ILC reports and the reports of the Special Rapporteur on the matter. It aims to be part of a renewed wave of engagement with both the substance and methodology surrounding this mercurial formal source of international law.In the book, ‘general principles’ are examined through various areas of international law, revealing their deep connections with other sources, overarching concepts, such as time and change, and their diverse manifestations across the field.General principles of law, alongside the treaties and customary international law, form the three formal sources of international law, as enshrined in Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ). Diverse functions are attributed to these principles by scholarship and case law: they are a source of various rules which merely form an expression of them: guidelines for a framework for interpretation/application of other rules; lacuna-filling norms; a source of interpretation of treaties and custom; a means for developing new treaties and custom; a supplemental source to treaties and custom; and even a modifier of treaties and custom.As a double-blind peer-reviewed publication, NYIL offers a forum for the publication of scholarly articles of a conceptual nature in a varying thematic area of public international law. In addition, as of 2012 each volume includes a section entitled ‘Dutch Practice in International Law', which replaces the section previously dedicated to Documentation. The NYIL has been published under the auspices of the T.M.C. Asser Instituut since 1970.