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When faced with those who act with impunity, we seek the protection
of law. We rely upon the legal system for justice, from
international human rights law that establishes common standards of
protection, to international criminal law that spearheads efforts
to end impunity for the most heinous atrocities. While legal
processes are perceived to combat impunity, and despite the ready
availability of the law, accountability often remains elusive. What
if the law itself enables impunity? Law's Impunity asks this
question in the context of the modern Private Military Company
(PMC), examining the relationship between law and the concepts of
responsibility and impunity. This book proposes that ordinary legal
processes do not neutralise, but rather legalise impunity. This
radical idea is applied to the abysmal record of human rights
violations perpetrated by the modern PMC and the shocking absence
of accountability. This book demonstrates how the law organises,
rather than overcomes, impunity by detailing how the modern PMC
exploits ordinary legal processes to systematically exclude itself
from legal responsibility. Thus, Law's Impunity offers an
alternative to conventional thinking about the law, providing an
innovative approach to assess and refine the rigour of legal
processes in the ongoing quest to end impunity.
The intense and polemical debate over the legality and morality of
weapons systems to which human cognitive functions are delegated
(up to and including the capacity to select targets and release
weapons without further human intervention) addresses a phenomena
which does not yet exist but which is widely claimed to be
emergent. This groundbreaking collection combines contributions
from roboticists, legal scholars, philosophers and sociologists of
science in order to recast the debate in a manner that clarifies
key areas and articulates questions for future research. The
contributors develop insights with direct policy relevance,
including who bears responsibility for autonomous weapons systems,
whether they would violate fundamental ethical and legal norms, and
how to regulate their development. It is essential reading for
those concerned about this emerging phenomenon and its consequences
for the future of humanity.
The intense and polemical debate over the legality and morality of
weapons systems to which human cognitive functions are delegated
(up to and including the capacity to select targets and release
weapons without further human intervention) addresses a phenomena
which does not yet exist but which is widely claimed to be
emergent. This groundbreaking collection combines contributions
from roboticists, legal scholars, philosophers and sociologists of
science in order to recast the debate in a manner that clarifies
key areas and articulates questions for future research. The
contributors develop insights with direct policy relevance,
including who bears responsibility for autonomous weapons systems,
whether they would violate fundamental ethical and legal norms, and
how to regulate their development. It is essential reading for
those concerned about this emerging phenomenon and its consequences
for the future of humanity.
When faced with those who act with impunity, we seek the protection
of law. We rely upon the legal system for justice, from
international human rights law that establishes common standards of
protection, to international criminal law that spearheads efforts
to end impunity for the most heinous atrocities. While legal
processes are perceived to combat impunity, and despite the ready
availability of the law, accountability often remains elusive. What
if the law itself enables impunity? Law's Impunity asks this
question in the context of the modern Private Military Company
(PMC), examining the relationship between law and the concepts of
responsibility and impunity. This book proposes that ordinary legal
processes do not neutralise, but rather legalise impunity. This
radical idea is applied to the abysmal record of human rights
violations perpetrated by the modern PMC and the shocking absence
of accountability. This book demonstrates how the law organises,
rather than overcomes, impunity by detailing how the modern PMC
exploits ordinary legal processes to systematically exclude itself
from legal responsibility. Thus, Law's Impunity offers an
alternative to conventional thinking about the law, providing an
innovative approach to assess and refine the rigour of legal
processes in the ongoing quest to end impunity.
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