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High(4)High quality. Established institution or organization with editorial oversight and accountability.
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Relevant to AI governance discussions around autonomous weapons; represents civil society advocacy perspective following a key 2024 UN vote, useful for tracking international policy developments on lethal autonomous systems.
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Importance: 45/100news articlenews
Summary
Human Rights Watch calls on states to pursue a binding international treaty on autonomous weapons systems following a UN General Assembly vote, arguing that existing international humanitarian law is insufficient to govern lethal autonomous weapons and that meaningful human control must be preserved in life-and-death decisions.
Key Points
- •A UN General Assembly resolution on autonomous weapons signals growing international consensus but falls short of binding legal obligations.
- •HRW argues that 'killer robots' lacking meaningful human control violate ethical and legal principles around accountability and distinction.
- •The article urges treaty negotiations to establish clear prohibitions and regulations on lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS).
- •Existing international humanitarian law frameworks are deemed inadequate to address the novel risks posed by fully autonomous weapons.
- •Civil society organizations like HRW are pushing governments to move beyond resolutions toward enforceable international agreements.
Cited by 1 page
| Page | Type | Quality |
|---|---|---|
| Autonomous Weapons | Risk | 56.0 |
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Killer Robots: UN Vote Should Spur Treaty Negotiations | Human Rights Watch
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Killer Robots: UN Vote Should Spur Treaty Negotiations
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The United Nations General Assembly hashtag #UNGA at UN Headquarters in New York City.
©2024 Ogaga Blessing for Stop Killer Robots
(New York, December 5, 2024) – The record number of countries voting in favor of the second-ever United Nations General Assembly resolution on lethal autonomous weapons systems, or “killer robots,” highlights the urgent need to open negotiations on a new treaty to ban them, Human Rights Watch said today.
On December 2, 2024, 166 countries voted in favor of Resolution 79/62 on lethal autonomous weapons systems, while 3 voted no, and 15 abstained. The resolution creates a new forum under UN auspices to discuss the serious challenges and concerns raised by autonomous weapons systems and what to do about them. These systems select and apply force to targets based on sensor processing rather than human input.
“The wide and growing state support for the General Assembly resolution on autonomous weapons systems shows there’s strong appetite for tackling fundamental concerns that come with removing human control from the use of force,” said Mary Wareham , deputy crisis, conflict and arms director at Human Rights Watch. “The challenge now is for states to move from talking about this challenge to negotiating a new treaty that provides the necessary framework to prevent a future of automated killing.”
The 2024 General Assembly resolution acknowledges the “negative consequences and impact of autonomous weapon systems on global security and regional and international stability, including the risk of an emerging arms race, of exacerbating existing conflicts and humanitarian crises, miscalculations, lowering the threshold for and escalation of conflicts and proliferation, inc
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