Customary International Humanitarian Law and Article 36 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions: A Stopgap Regulator of Autonomous Weapons Systems?

IF 0.6 Q2 LAW
Evhen Tsybulenko, A. Kajander
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Abstract

Abstract Autonomous Weapons Systems (AWS) are already in use around the world by various militaries. However, the law governing such systems in the scope of international humanitarian law (IHL) currently lacks specific binding international treaties. Nevertheless, the existing framework is not silent on the topic of new weapons. Article 36 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions provides an obligation for states to review new weapons. Consequently, as AWS are being adopted, acquired, and developed, the wide reach of 174 state parties of Article 36, therefore prima facie, represents a reasonable chance of providing some AWS regulation in the meantime. Nevertheless, Article 36 is generic to all new weapons and therefore unable to address concerns specific to AWS. Therefore, considering the vast difference of AWS to weapons which rely on a human operator, it is not unreasonable to state that there is a need for additional regulation. Hence, various non-binding guidelines and recommendations, such as the ‘11 Guiding Principles’ agreed upon by the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons Group of Government Experts and the International Committee of the Red Cross’ Position on Autonomous Weapons Systems, could conceivably be considered to fill this void at least partly, albeit in a non-binding manner. When considered together with Article 36, these non-binding legal instruments could add predictability and consistency to the state parties’ reviews. Consequently, this paper will examine whether Article 36, in combination with the various non-binding instruments and national positions of state parties to Additional Protocol I, is viable as a binding stopgap measure to regulate AWS. As a result, the structure of the article is trifold. The first part focuses on Article 36, the second on the non-binding guiding instruments, and finally, when both are considered together, whether Article 36 could fulfil such a stopgap role.
习惯国际人道法和《日内瓦公约第一附加议定书》第36条:自主武器系统的权宜之计监管机构?
自主武器系统(AWS)已经在世界各地的军队中使用。然而,在国际人道法范围内管理这些制度的法律目前缺乏具体的具有约束力的国际条约。然而,现有框架在新武器问题上并非沉默。《日内瓦公约》第一附加议定书第36条规定了各国审查新武器的义务。因此,随着AWS的采用、收购和发展,第36条的174个缔约国的广泛影响,因此,从表面上看,代表了在此期间提供一些AWS监管的合理机会。然而,第36条适用于所有新武器,因此无法解决AWS特有的问题。因此,考虑到AWS与依赖人类操作的武器之间的巨大差异,有必要对其进行额外的监管。因此,各种不具约束力的指导方针和建议,如《某些常规武器公约》政府专家组和红十字国际委员会关于自主武器系统的立场商定的“11项指导原则”,可以被认为至少部分地填补了这一空白,尽管是以一种不具约束力的方式。当与第36条一起审议时,这些不具约束力的法律文书可以增加缔约国审查的可预测性和一致性。因此,本文将研究第36条与各种非约束性文书和《第一附加议定书》缔约国的国家立场相结合,是否可以作为一种具有约束力的权宜之计来规范AWS。因此,文章的结构是三重的。第一部分侧重于第36条,第二部分侧重于无约束力的指导文书,最后,当两者放在一起考虑时,第36条是否可以发挥这种权宜之计的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
62.50%
发文量
8
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