University of Liverpool collaboration
In 2017, Article 36 commenced a collaboration with sociologists at the University of Liverpool to look at the changing character of law in war, and the role that legal considerations play in decisions around targeting and the use of force.
With our PhD student, Alex Holder, and his supervisor, Michael Mair, we have been examining the situated practices of legal reasoning engaged in by military personnel, among other themes.
Latest content on this issue
Jan 2022
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The gap between ‘compliance’ and protecting civilians in war
Dec 2021
publication
The compliance trap and the protection of civilians: Achieving legality in an aerial targeting operation
Dec 2019
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An empty spectacle? On the order of deliberations in the annual meeting of the CCW
Sep 2018
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Briefing on drones for states attending UN General Assembly First Committee 2018
Jun 2018
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Stealth Bombing: Europe’s Hidden Involvement in the United States’ Drone Wars
Jun 2018
publication
Targeting Legality: The Armed Drone as a Socio-technical and Socio-Legal System
Jun 2018
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Article for the Journal of the Oxford Centre for Socio-Legal Studies on armed drones
Feb 2018
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The future of European militaries will be remotely piloted – and that should worry us…
Dec 2017
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Evidence to APPG inquiry on the UK’s use of armed drones
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