Abstract
From the emergence and increasing use of unmanned or remotely piloted vehicles to the advent of cyber war and conflict, the development of new and exotic military technologies has provoked fierce and divisive public debate regarding the ethical challenges posed by such technologies.1 I have increasingly come to believe that the language of morality and ethics has served us poorly in this context and presently serves to further confuse us, rather than to clarify or enlighten us, on how best to cope with the continuing development and deployment of seemingly exotic new military technologies.
DOI
10.26054/0d-2qzk-fkxd
Recommended Citation
George R. Lucas, Legal and Ethical Precepts Governing Emerging Military Technologies: Research and Use, 2013 ULR 1271 (2013). https://doi.org/10.26054/0d-2qzk-fkxd