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English
Howgate Publishing Limited
28 October 2021
Cyber technology gives states the ability to accomplish effects that once required kinetic action. These effects can now be achieved with cyber means in a manner that is covert, deniable, cheap, and technologically feasible for many governments.  In some cases, cyber means are morally preferable to conventional military operations, but in other cases, cyber’s unique qualities can lead to greater mischief than governments would have chanced using kinetic means. This volume addresses the applicability of traditional military ethics to cyber operations, jus ad vim (an emerging sub-field governing grey zone or soft war operations), the rights of the targets of cyber operations, cyber sabotage, cyber surveillance, phase zero operations, psychological operations, artificial intelligence, and algorithmic ethics.  Uniquely, it includes a number of cyber incidents that do not currently exist as case studies and have not received much public attention.  This volume has been designed to work as a handbook for military and security professionals involved in cyber training, teaching, and application.

Volume editor:   , ,
Imprint:   Howgate Publishing Limited
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 12mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9781912440269
ISBN 10:   1912440261
Pages:   238
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Notes on Contributors Foreword Scott M. Virgil Abbreviations   INTRODUCTION Thomas W. Simpson   PART ONE   1          Just war Theory and Cyber Warfare             Fritz Allhoff and Jonathan Milgrim   2          Jus ad Vim: Sub-Threshold Cyber Warfare             Michael L. Gross   3          Rights of those Targeted in Military Cyber Operations             Michael Skerker      PART TWO   4          Cyber and Conventional Military Operations             Richard Schoonhoven   5          The Ethics of Cyber-Sabotage             Jeremy Davis   6          Not War: The Ethics of ‘Phase Zero' Cyber Operations             Edward Barrett   7          Ethics of Military Cyber Surveillance             Peter Lee   8          Ethics and Cyber Enabled PSYOP             Adam Henschke        PART THREE            9          The Morality of Machines: Cyber Guardian Angels            Andrew M. Tidmarsh   10        AI Ethics             Scott Robbins    11        Ethics and Cyber Systems: Artificial Intelligent Weapons Systems and Moral Slippage             Elke Schwarz   CONCLUSION David Whetham and George Lucas     Index      

Michael Skerker is a Professor in the Leadership, Ethics, and Law department at the U.S. Naval Academy.  His research focuses on police, military, and intelligence ethics. Publications include articles and chapters on ethics and asymmetrical war, collective responsibility, police ethics, intelligence ethics, interrogation/torture, and the book An Ethics of Interrogation (University of Chicago Press, 2010). His most recent book The Moral Status of Combatants: A New Theory of Just War (Routledge, 2020) explores the moral status of combatants fighting in unjust wars. Prof. Skerker is also the co-editor of Sovereignty and the New Executive Authority (Oxford University Press, 2019) and Military Virtues (Howgate Publishing, 2019).  Prof. Skerker is on the advisory board of the High Value Detainee Interrogation Group and consults with businesses, law enforcement, and the military. David Whetham is Professor of Ethics and the Military Profession in the Defence Studies Department of King’s College London. He is the Director of the King’s Centre for Military Ethics located at the UK’s Joint Services Command and Staff College. David supports military ethics education in many different countries and has held Visiting Fellowships at the Stockdale Center for Ethical Leadership, US Naval Academy Annapolis, the Centre for Defence Leadership and Ethics at the Australian Defence College in Canberra and at the University of Glasgow. He was a Mid-Career Fellow at the British Academy in 2017-18 and is currently a Visiting Professorial Fellow at the University of New South Wales. He is a member of the UK MoD AI Ethics Advisory Panel, and in 2020 he was appointed as an Assistant Inspector-General to the Australian Defence Force to assist in the final stages of the Afghanistan Inquiry. David is the Vice President of the European Chapter of the International Society for Military Ethics (Euro ISME).  

Reviews for Cyber Warfare Ethics

An accurate and comprehensive collection that captures the various ethical and moral challenges that we as cyber warfare planners and operators grapple with continuously, illustrated through both real world and notional case studies.  Cyber Warfare Ethics addresses these concerns across a wide range of cyber warfare operations as well as those inherent in the use of today’s advanced technology employed in warfare.  Anyone interested in cyber warfare should read this book to understand the important ethical considerations of this rapidly evolving, critical warfare area. Captain James Caroland, Chair, Cyber Science Department, U.S. Naval Academy and U.S. Navy Cyber Warfare Engineer Cyber operations, both above and below the threshold of violent conflict, continue to vex policy makers and strategists. With thousands of years of experience in physical conflict, nations are still developing their operational, legal and ethical approaches to this newer non-kinetic realm. Concepts such a proportionality and discrimination must be taken into account in these evolving national security architectures. This new book provides a range of very useful insights for national security leaders and their organisations as they traverse the challenges of developing, absorbing, employing and evolving new age cyber capabilities. Cyber Warfare Ethics is a publication that should be on the reading list for anyone – policy makers, strategists, academics and citizens - with an interest in the ethical application of all forms of cyber power in the coming decades. Major General Mick Ryan, Commander Australian Defence College


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