CALL FOR PAPERS: INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW: NAVIGATING THE NEXUS OF TECHNOLOGY, WARFARE AND GLOBAL NORMS

CALL FOR PAPERS: INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW: NAVIGATING THE NEXUS OF TECHNOLOGY, WARFARE AND GLOBAL NORMS

March 5th – 7th, 2025

Venue: Auditorium, TNDALU

About the Conference

Historically, warfare in the civilizational spectrum was completely a human affair ably assisted by natural life forms (animals and vegetation) with justified and unjustified rationales. In the moral sense, the discipline of international law and its disciples both promote universal well-being, peace, harmony, and prosperity for humanity and all life forms. In effect, war is positioned only as an exceptional institution in exercising selfdefence and confronting injustice and aggression. Thus, the birth of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) is primarily devoted to the cause of finding the balance between Principles of Military Necessity and Humanity. However, in the landscape of World War I and II, the atomic droppings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki alerted the humanitarian mission and legal systems towards an age of machinery-dominated and controlled warfare. The notion of scientific uncertainty of weapons systems and its catastrophic effect on human and ecological life on the theme of existential challenge has been much debated since the St. Petersburg Declaration of 1868, Brussels Conference, 1874, Hague Regulations 1907, Geneva Conventions 1949 and Additional Protocols of 1977. The ICRC discharging its role as the guardian angel in achieving the spirit of IHL has periodically raised the use of Automated Weapons Systems (AWS) and its ill consequences on the maintenance of the laws on humanity.

Submission Guidelines

Abstracts must be submitted by February 14, 2025, to: [email protected]

THEMES FOR PAPERS

Papers are invited on topics aligned with the technical sessions. Submissions relevant to the overarching theme of: “Artificial Intelligence and International Humanitarian Law: Navigating the Nexus of Technology, Warfare, and Global Norms”will be considered for acceptance.

For more details, refer here

Brochure

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