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International Law and Technological Change: Testing the Adaptability of International Law [Kõva köide]

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This comprehensive book explores the consequences of modern technology for procedural and substantive areas of international law. It examines to what extent existing principles and rules of international law can adapt to unprecedented technological changes.

This comprehensive book explores the consequences of modern technology for procedural and substantive areas of international law. It examines to what extent existing principles and rules of international law can adapt to unprecedented technological changes.



Contributors outline the impact of technological advancements on international law across key areas such as communications, governance, surveillance and security, immigration, warfare, and economics. They consider whether and how the use of new technologies, including information and communication technology, autonomous artificial intelligence systems and blockchain infrastructures, should be regulated. Chapters investigate the impact of technology use on international legal discourse, international law-making, implementation of international law, and international accountability across the globe. This book ultimately demonstrates the numerous advantages of technology in aiding the interpretation, identification, formation, implementation, and enforcement of international law, provided that its application is appropriately regulated.



This book is an essential resource for scholars and students of international law, particularly those with an interest in law and technology. It is also highly beneficial for legal professionals seeking to understand the evolving dynamics of international law within the new technological landscape.

Arvustused

An inspired, timely collection of diverse voices that together demonstrate the profound impact of technology across legal regimes. -- Gleider Hernández, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium International Law and Technological Change offers a carefully crafted collection of chapters on international laws relationship to emerging technologies like AI, cyber and biometrics and the new actors, opportunities, and risks they bring to global governance. In doing so, the volume provides a descriptive and normative catalog not only on how international law regulates these technologies but how such technologies will impact the formation and application of international law itself. -- Duncan B. Hollis, Temple University Beasley School of Law, USA

Contents
1 Introduction: International law and technological change 1
Irene Couzigou
PART I TECHNOLOGY, INTERNATIONAL LEGAL DISCOURSE AND INTERNATIONAL LAW-MAKING
17
2 Investigations with digital open-source information and the stabilization
of international norms: Protecting the principle of non-refoulement 19
Henning Lahmann
3 The challenges posed to democratic governance by Big Tech: What role for
international law? 47
Neli Frost
4 A computational turn in customary international law: A solution to the
discontents with the identification of custom? 73
Emilie van den Hoven
PART II TECHNOLOGY, IMPLEMENTATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 97
Section 1 Challenges for international human rights law and refugee law 99
5 Translating and developing international human rights law in the online
sphere: The role of Metas Oversight Board 101
Stefania Di Stefano
6 The European Unions border security ecosystem reconciling technological
development, human rights and security threats at the borders of Europe 129
Lauren E Elrick
7 International refugee law in the digital age: Opportunities and challenges
157
Sandrine Turgis
Section 2 Challenges for international humanitarian law 181
8 Hypersonic weapons and international law: Incompatibilities with arms
control treaties and international humanitarian law 183
Elisabeth Hoffberger-Pippan
9 The law of targetings mechanization and objectivization through the use of
artificial intelligence 211
Tobias Vestner
PART III TECHNOLOGY AND INTERNATIONAL ACCOUNTABILITY 235
10 The computer did it, not me! The challenges of allocating international
legal responsibility for the use of autonomous cyber capabilities enabled by
artificial intelligence 237
Samuli Haataja and Simon McKenzie
11 International human rights law in the era of blockchain: Redefining
accountability in decentralized systems 261
José Gustavo Prieto Muñoz
12 Conclusion: International law and technological change 289
Irene Couzigou
Index 301
Edited by Irene Couzigou, Professor of International Law, University of Aberdeen, UK