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  4. Power and politics in the design of autonomous and AI-enabled weapons
 
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Power and politics in the design of autonomous and AI-enabled weapons

Publikationstyp
Book Part
Date Issued
2026-04-01
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Wood, Nathan  
Lufttransportsysteme M-28  
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/63306
First published in
Philosophy of engineering and technology  
Number in series
50
Start Page
93
End Page
116
Citation
Philosophy of Engineering and Technology 50: 93-116 (2026)
Publisher DOI
10.1007/978-3-032-17371-3_6
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-105039478656
Publisher
Springer
ISBN of container
978-3-032-17371-3
978-3-032-17370-6
978-3-032-17373-7
A weapon is a weapon, and nothing about its general “weaponness” seems to indicate much about its underlying values. However, closer examination of weapons’ designs can tell us much. For whom were they designed? Have safeguards been put into place? If so, which ones, and to the protection of whom? Autonomous weapons have existed for decades, and AI-powered and AI-enabled systems are becoming increasingly important, but all of these systems raise ethical and legal concerns. Arguably, many of the challenges might feasibly be addressed through design or institutional solutions, but importantly, how systems are designed says a great deal about those designing them and those contemplating their deployment. In this chapter, I argue that if states wish to demonstrate their commitment to human rights and the protection of innocent lives, autonomous and AI-enabled systems in the military must fulfill several design desiderata: predictability, governability, responsibility, and traceability. I then explore concrete ways these desiderata may be fulfilled in practice.
Subjects
AI
Autonomous weapon systems
Design ethics
International humanitarian law
Military ethics
DDC Class
623: Military Engineering and Marine Engineering
006.3: Artificial Intelligence
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