-
详细
- Provides a comprehensive understanding of the international legal rules applicable to cyber attacks
- Examines whether cyber attacks can ever meet the threshold of 'armed conflict' and to what extent rules of international humanitarian law apply to cyber operations
- Investigates whether a computer network can ever be a legitimate military target, what the status is of civilians involved in cyber attacks, and what implications cyber offences can have for neutral states
The internet has changed the rules of many industries, and war is no exception. But can a computer virus be classed as an act of war? Does a Denial of Service attack count as an armed attack? And does a state have a right to self-defence when cyber attacked? With the range and sophistication of cyber attacks against states showing a dramatic increase in recent times, this book investigates the traditional concepts of 'use of force', 'armed attack', and 'armed conflict' and asks whether existing laws created for analogue technologies can be applied to new digital developments.
The book provides a comprehensive analysis of primary documents and surrounding literature, to investigate whether and how existing rules on the use of force in international law apply to a relatively new phenomenon such as cyberspace operations. It assesses the rules of jus ad bellum and jus in bello, whether based on treaty or custom, and analyses why each rule applies or does not apply to cyber operations. Those rules which can be seen to apply are then discussed in the context of each specific type of cyber operation. The book addresses the key questions of whether a cyber operation amounts to the use of force and, if so, whether the victim state can exercise its right of self-defence; whether cyber operations trigger the application of international humanitarian law when they are not accompanied by traditional hostilities; what rules must be followed in the conduct of cyber hostilities; how neutrality is affected by cyber operations; whether those conducting cyber operations are combatants, civilians, or civilians taking direct part in hostilities. The book is essential reading for everyone wanting a better understanding of how international law regulates cyber combat.
Readership: Scholars and students of the international law of cyber warfare and international humanitarian law; intelligence analysts (civilian and military), and policymakers
-
1: Identifying the Problem and the Applicable Law
2: Cyber Operations and the jus ad bellum
3: The Applicability of the jus in bello to Cyber Operations
4: Cyber Operations and the Conduct of Hostilities
5: Cyber Operations and the Law of Neutrality
General Conclusions
-
Dr Marco Roscini is currently Reader in International Law at the University of Westminster School of Law and Visiting Fellow at King's College London. He was previously a Research Fellow at the University of Verona School of Law. Dr. Roscini specialises in the international law of armed conflict and disarmament law. He has published a monograph on nuclear-weapon-free zones (Giappichelli, 2003) and is the co-editor (with Daniel H. Joyner) of Non-Proliferation Law as a Special Regime. He is also the author of numerous articles. Dr Roscini is the holder of a Leverhulme Fellowship 2012-2013 for his research on cyber warfare. He is also a member of the International Law Association's Committee on Nuclear Weapons, Non-proliferation and Contemporary International Law, and of the European Union's Non-Proliferation Consortium. In January 2009, he was appointed a member of the Peer Review College of the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC).
-
"The increasing amount of cyber attacks and cyber exploitation operations by States and non-State actors calls for a comprehensive review of the current legal framework and its loopholes. Marco Roscini's admirable study of pertinent rules of international law, whether based on treaty or custom, underlines the applicability of existing law to new technological developments. His convincing examination of relevant rules of the jus ad bellum, the jus in bello and the law of neutrality will facilitate implementation of the law in a particularly complex environment and may also help to inform peacetime cooperation on cyber security for which sustainable efforts and effective new regulation are urgently required." - Dieter Fleck, Former Director International Agreements & Policy, German Ministry of Defence, Member of the Advisory Board, Amsterdam Center of International Law
"The present volume by Dr. Marco Roscini ... is a systematic, up-to-date and well-informed analysis of the legal discourse that has taken place thus far. The author identifies the issues that have given rise to much discussion, marshals the evidence and provides a clear picture of where cyber operations stand in the overall scheme of the international law of armed conflict. This gives him an opportunity to delve into many controversial aspects of that law, irrespective of their kinetic/cyber application. ... The book surely sets the stage for the future encounter between law and reality." - Yoram Dinstein, from the Foreword
"Land, sea and air are no more the only domains where hostilities are conducted. Cyberspace has now become the fourth dimension. Marco Roscini's book on Cyber Operations and the Use of Force in International Lawexplores this new and challenging subject. Taking into account recent State practice, the author relies on traditional customary and treaty law to construe rules applicable to cyber operations. He examines all the main chapters of the law of armed conflict: jus ad bellum, jus in bello and the law of neutrality. A sound knowledge of the law of armed conflict allows the author to formulate a complete set of rules for cyber operations in a clear and realistic mode. Dr. Roscini's book is to be recommended to the attention of scholars, legal advisors and to all concerned with planning defence operations." - Natalino Ronzitti, Emeritus Professor of International Law, Luiss University, Rome