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The revolution of autonomous systems and its implications for the arms trade

Wyatt, A.
Galliott, Jai
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Abstract
Beyond the, admittedly significant, ethical, moral and legal issues raised by increasingly autonomous and remote-operated weapons, it is also important to consider the question of how the proliferation of increasingly Autonomous Weapon Systems (AWS) would influence and, in turn, be propagated by the global arms trade. As the core enabling technologies for Autonomous Weapon Systems (chiefly various forms of Artificial Intelligence) mature, the barriers of entry for potential adopters will continue to fall. The negative consequences of terrorist groups gaining the capacity to remotely strike previously protected targets, of insurgents to offset the traditional military advantages of states, or of smaller states to interfere in the domestic affairs of their neighbours, are becoming increasingly clear. This chapter demonstrates that the avenues for AWS proliferation are already in place and argues that, short of an increasingly unlikely pre-emptive ban under international law, policymakers must act to establish the mutual understandings, definitional agreements and bilateral control regimes that will be necessary to limit the negative impacts of uncontrolled AWS proliferation.
Keywords
Autonomous Weapon Systems, AWS
Date
2020
Type
Book chapter
Journal
Book
Research Handbook on the Arms Trade
Volume
Issue
Page Range
389-405
Article Number
ACU Department
Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences
Faculty of Education and Arts
Relation URI
Event URL
Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
File Access
Controlled
Notes
Copyright © 2020. Edward Elgar Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.