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E-raamat: One Nation Under Drones: Legality, Morality, and Utility of Unmanned Combat Systems

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  • Formaat: 238 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Nov-2018
  • Kirjastus: Naval Institute Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781682473801
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  • Formaat: 238 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Nov-2018
  • Kirjastus: Naval Institute Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781682473801

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One Nation Under Drones is an interesting and informative review of how robotic and unmanned systems are impacting every aspect of American life, from how we fight our wars to how we play to how we grow our food. Edited by John Jackson, this highly readable book features chapters from a dozen experts, researchers, and operators of the sophisticated systems that have become ubiquitous across the nation and around the world. Press reports have focused primarily on unmanned aerial vehicles, officially designated as UAVs, but more often referred to as 'drones'.

This work takes you behind the scenes and describes how Predators, Reapers, Scan Eagles, and dozens of other pilotless aircraft have been used to fight the Global War on Terrorism. Although these systems seemed to emerge fully-developed into the skies above America's distant battlefields following the attacks of September 11, 2001, readers will discover that they actually trace their lineage to World War I, when the 'automatic airplane/aerial torpedo', designed and built by the Sperry Gyroscope Company, made its first flight just over a century ago. Unmanned aircraft were used by various combatants in World War II and took many forms: from converted manned bombers to intercontinental attacks on the American homeland by rice-paper balloons. Technology developed in the latter decades of the 20th century enabled crews stationed thousands of miles away to attack targets on remote battlefields. Such long-range and remote-controlled weapons have been extensively used but are controversial from both legal and ethical standpoints.

Chapters written by international law specialists and drone pilots with advanced education in ethics address these issues from both sides of the argument. The book also details how robotic systems are being used on land, in and below the seas, and in civilian applications such as driverless cars. Three dozen photographs display drones as small as an insect up to those as large as a 737 airliner. One Nation Under Drones covers such a wide array of topics that it will be of interest to everyone from the casual reader seeking to know more about these systems to national security professionals, both in and out of uniform, who will be making decisions about their procurement and use in decades to come.

Arvustused

Drones are everywhere we want to be and many places we dont. And everyone has them; so, defending against them matters. In this feast of thought, authors address ranging from what they are and how they are used to the morality and legality of their employment. Much to ponder. Martin Libicki, author of Cyberspace in Peace and War, DVP US Naval Academy

The author has provided a fascinating view of the history and development of the UAV and looked at the many issues surrounding these vehicles. This is a book that should be read because it deals with matters that have not received the exposure and debate they merit. FIRE Reviews

A unique and seminal work of extraordinary merit, One Nation Under Drones: Legality, Morality, and Utility of Unmanned Combat Systems is unreservedly recommended for community, college, university, and governmental library Aviation History collections in general, and Contemporary Drone supplement studies reading lists in particular. Midwest Book Review

Foreword Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Unmanned Systems) vii
Francis L. Kelley Jr.
Acknowledgments ix
Chapter 1 A Robot's Family Tree: An Introduction and Brief History of Unmanned Systems
1(23)
John Edward Jackson
Chapter 2 Drones: The Science Fiction Technology of Tomorrow Is Already Here Today
24(6)
Konstantin Kakaes
P. W. Singer
Chapter 3 Rise of Terror/Rise of Drones: A World View
30(24)
Dan Gettinger
Chapter 4 State of the Operational Art: Maritime Systems
54(21)
Arthur Holland Michel
Chapter 5 When Robots Rule the Waves?
75(24)
Robert Sparrow
George R. Lucas Jr.
Chapter 6 The U.S. Marine Corps, the Evolving Amphibious Task Force, and the Rise of Unmanned Systems
99(19)
Robbin Laird
Chapter 7 Defeating the Threat of Small Unmanned Aerial Systems
118(15)
Dillon R. Patterson
Chapter 8 Narrowing the International Law Divide: The Drone Debate Matures
133(17)
Michael N. Schmitt
Chapter 9 Autonomous Weapons and the Law
150(15)
Christopher M. Ford
Chapter 10 Lethal Autonomous Systems and the Plight of the Noncombatant
165(11)
Ron Arkin
Chapter 11 The Ethics of Remote Weapons: Reapers, Red Herrings, and a Real Problem
176(18)
Joe Chapa
Chapter 12 Techno-Partners All Around Us: Civilian Applications for Drones
194(13)
Brian Wynne
Chapter 13 The View Downrange: The Decades Ahead
207(6)
John Edward Jackson
Contributors 213(6)
Index 219
Following a 27-year career as a Navy logistics officer, Capt. John E. Jackson, USN (Ret.) has spent more than three decades as an educator, author, and researcher in the field of technology and military operations. As a senior course moderator at the U.S. Naval War College he designed and regularly teaches a highly regarded course entitled 'Unmanned Systems and Conflict in the 21st Century'. He is a frequent lecturer on this subject and testified before the House Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs in 2010. He lives in Middletown, Rhode Island.