- Jens David Ohlin, Remoteness and Reciprocal Risk
- Emily Crawford, The Principle of Distinction and Remote Warfare
- Robert Heinsch, Modern Drone Warfare and the Geographical Scope of Application of IHL: Pushing the Limits of Territorial Boundaries
- Anthony Cullen, The Characterisation of Remote Warfare under International Humanitarian Law
- Gloria Gaggioli, Remoteness and Human Rights Law
- Mark Klamberg, Exploiting Legal Thresholds, Fault-Lines and Gaps in the Context of Remote Warfare
- Nigel D. White & Lydia Davies-Bright, Drone Strikes: A Remote Form of Self-Defence?
- Geoffrey Corn, Drone Warfare and the Erosion of Traditional Limits on War Powers
- William C. Banks, Developing Norms for Cyber Conflict
- Terry D. Gill, Jelle van Haaster, & Mark Roorda, Some Legal and Operational Considerations Regarding Remote Warfare: Drones and Cyber Warfare Revisited
- Ian S. Henderson, Patrick Keane & Josh Liddy, Remote and Autonomous Warfare Systems: Precautions in Attack and Individual Accountability
- Robin Geiß & Henning Lahmann, Autonomous Weapons Systems: A Paradigm Shift for the Law of Armed Conflict
- Peter Margulies, Making Autonomous Targeting Accountable: Command Responsibility for Computer-Guided Lethal Force in Armed Conflicts
- Michael W. Meier, The Strategic Implications of Lethal Autonomous Weapons
Tuesday, November 7, 2017
Ohlin: Research Handbook on Remote Warfare
Jens David Ohlin (Cornell Univ. - Law) has published Research Handbook on Remote Warfare (Edward Elgar Publishing 2017). Contents include: