Potentially LAWS could identify and attack a target without human intervention. This issue was first brought to the international community’s attention by Human Rights Watch in its report titled “Losing Humanity: The Case Against Killer Robots”. The Campaign to Stop Killer Robots as part of its advocacy on LAWS produced this short film explaining the background to LAWS and work being undertaken within the United Nations and civil society.Les SALA pourraient potentiellement être capable d’identifier et d’engager une cible sans intervention humaine. C’est Human Rights Watch qui a le premier apporté cette question à la connaissance de la communauté internationale à travers son rapport “Losing Humanity: The Case Against Killer Robots”. LaCampagne Stop Killer Robots, à travers son plaidoyer sur les SALA a produit ce court-métrage expliquant le contexte dans lequel évoluent les SALA et le travail fait au sein des Nations Unies et de la Société Civile.
Documentation sur les armes létales autonomes
American Society of International Law – Panel on Autonomous Weaponry and Armed Conflict
ARKIN, Ronald – Lethal Autonomous Systems and the Plight of the Non-combatant
ASARO, Peter – On banning autonomous weapon systems: human rights, automation, and the dehumanization of lethal decision-making
ANDERSON, Kenneth and WAXMAN, Matthew – Law and Ethics for Autonomous Weapons Systems: Why a Ban Won’t Work and How the Laws of War Can
HEYNS, Christof – Report on Extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions (focusing on lethal autonomous weapons systems)
International Committee of the Red Cross – Report of the ICRC meeting on autonomous weapon systems, 26 – 28 March 2014
International Institute of Humanitarian Law – International Humanitarian Law and New Weapon Technologies
MARCHANT, Gary; ALLENBY, Braden; ARKIN, Ronald; BARRETT, Edward; BORENSTEIN, Jason; GAUDET, Lyn; KITTERIE, Orde; LIN, Patrick; LUCAS, George; O’MEARA, Richard; and SILBERMAN, Jared –International Governance of Autonomous Military Robots (from The Colombia, Science and Technology Law Review)
MARSH, Nicholas (2014) Defining the Scope of Autonomy, PRIO Policy Brief, 2. Oslo: PRIO.
LIN, Patrick; BEKEY, George; and ABNEY, Keith – Autonomous Military Robotics: Risk, Ethics, and Design
SHARKEY, Noel – The evitability of autonomous robots warfare
SHARKEY, Noel – Towards a principle for the human supervisory control of robot weapons
SHARKEY, Noel – Weapons of Indiscriminate Lethality
SCHMITT, Michael – Autonomous Weapon Systems and International Humanitarian Law: A Reply to the Critics
MELZER, Nils – Human Rights Implications of the Usage of Drones and Unmanned Robots in Warfare – Legal Study and Policy Advice. Brussels: European Union Parliament, 2013
UNIDIR – Framing Discussions on the Weaponization of Increasingly Autonomous Technologies