Ethics of Drone Strikes : : Restraining Remote-Control Killing / / Christian Enemark.
Explores a variety of ways of thinking ethically about drone violenceExplores how drone violence works in different circumstances, its complexities and various effects, and ways of judging it morally9 substantive chapters demonstrate different ways of thinking ethically about the current and future...
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Superior document: | Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter EBOOK PACKAGE COMPLETE 2022 English |
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Place / Publishing House: | Edinburgh : : Edinburgh University Press, , [2022] ©2021 |
Year of Publication: | 2022 |
Language: | English |
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (244 p.) :; 2 B/W tables |
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Table of Contents:
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- NOTES ON THE CONTRIBUTORS
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- INTRODUCTION Thinking Ethically about Drone Violence
- ONE Riskless Warfare Revisited: Drones, Asymmetry and the Just Use of Force
- TWO Jus ad Vim and Drone Warfare: A Classical Just War Perspective
- THREE The Complicated Reality of Drone Strikes for Law Enforcement
- FOUR Drone Violence as Wild Justice: Administrative Executions on the Terror Frontier
- FIVE ‘A New Departure’: Britain’s Lethal Drone Policy and the Range of Justice
- SIX Ethics for Drone Operators: Rules versus Virtues
- SEVEN Drone Warriors, Revealed Humanity and a Feminist Ethics of Care
- EIGHT Armed Drone Systems: The Ethical Challenge of Replacing Human Control with Increasingly Autonomous Elements
- NINE Autonomous Armed Drones and the Challenges to Multilateral Consensus on Value-Based Regulation
- CONCLUSION
- INDEX