Cyber War: Law and Ethics for Virtual Conflicts
Document Type
Book
Publication Date
1-1-2015
Abstract
Cyber weapons and cyber warfare have become one of the most dangerous innovations of recent years, and a significant threat to national security. Cyber weapons can imperil economic, political, and military systems by a single act, or by multifaceted orders of effect, with wide-ranging potential consequences. Unlike past forms of warfare circumscribed by centuries of just war tradition and Law of Armed Conflict prohibitions, cyber warfare occupies a particularly ambiguous status in the conventions of the laws of war. Furthermore, cyber attacks put immense pressure on conventional notions of sovereignty, and the moral and legal doctrines that were developed to regulate them. This book, written by an unrivalled set of experts, assists in proactively addressing the ethical and legal issues that surround cyber warfare by considering, first, whether the Laws of Armed Conflict apply to cyberspace just as they do to traditional warfare, and second, the ethical position of cyber warfare against the background of our generally recognized moral traditions in armed conflict.
Keywords
information warfare, international law, self-defense, computer security, cyberterrorism
Repository Citation
Finkelstein, Claire O.; Ohlin, Jens; and Govern, Kevin, "Cyber War: Law and Ethics for Virtual Conflicts" (2015). Books. 16.
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_books/16