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International review of the Red Cross : humanitarian debate: law, policy, action / International Committee of the Red Cross.

Material type: Continuing resourceContinuing resourceSeries: Digital technologies and war. (913) ; 102Geneva : International Committee of the Red Cross and Cambridge University Press, c2021Description: v. 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISSN:
  • 18163831
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HV560  R48 2020 v.102 (913)
Online resources:
Partial contents:
The role of digital technologies in humanitarian law, policy and action: Charting a path forward / Saman Rejali, Yannick Heiniger
Testimonies: How humanitarian technologies impact the lives of affected populations
Q&A: Humanitarian operations, the spread of harmful information and data protection
“Doing no harm” in the digital age: What the digitalization of cash means for humanitarian action / Jo Burton
Humanitarian aid in the age of COVID-19: A review of big data crisis analytics and the General Data Protection Regulation / Theodora Gazi, Go to the author pageAlexandros Gazis
The struggle against sexual violence in conflict: Investigating the digital turn / Kristin Bergtora Sandvik, Kjersti Lohne
Media and compassion after digital war: Why digital media haven't transformed responses to human suffering in contemporary conflict / Andrew Hoskins
AI for humanitarian action: Human rights and ethics / Michael Pizzi, Mila Romanoff, Tim Engelhardt
Freedom of assembly under attack: General and indiscriminate surveillance and interference with internet communications / Ilia Siatitsa
Biases in machine learning models and big data analytics: The international criminal and humanitarian law implications / Nema Milaninia
Stepping back from the brink: Why multilateral regulation of autonomy in weapons systems is difficult, yet imperative and feasible / Frank Sauer
The changing role of multilateral forums in regulating armed conflict in the digital age / Amandeep S. Gill
Twenty years on: International humanitarian law and the protection of civilians against the effects of cyber operations during armed conflicts / Laurent Gisel, Tilman Rodenhäuser, Knut Dörmann
The application of the principle of distinction in the cyber context: A Chinese perspective / Zhixiong Huang, Yaohui Ying
Hacking humanitarians: Defining the cyber perimeter and developing a cyber security strategy for international humanitarian organizations in digital transformation / Massimo Marelli
The updated ICRC Commentary on the Third Geneva Convention: A new tool to protect prisoners of war in the twenty-first century / Jemma Arman, Jean-Marie Henckaerts, Heleen Hiemstra, Kvitoslava Krotiuk
The camera and the Red Cross: “Lamentable pictures” and conflict photography bring into focus an international movement, 1855–1865 / Sonya de Laat
Book review: "Digital Witness: Using Open Source Information for Human Rights Investigation, Documentation, and Accountability" / Emma Irving
Book review: "The Persistence of Reciprocity in International Humanitarian Law" / Matthias Vanhullebusch
Librarian’s Pick: "Transitional Justice and the 'Disappeared' of Northern Ireland: Silence, Memory, and the Construction of the Past" / Charlotte Mohr
ICRC Position Paper: Artificial intelligence and machine learning in armed conflict: A human-centred approach
ICRC Position Paper: International humanitarian law and cyber operations during armed conflicts
The ICRC Library goes digital
ICRC-affiliated reports: Digital technologies and war
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Periodicals Periodicals Commission on Human Rights Library Periodicals Newly Processed HV560 R48 2020 v.102 (913) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available P-000354d

The role of digital technologies in humanitarian law, policy and action: Charting a path forward / Saman Rejali, Yannick Heiniger

Testimonies: How humanitarian technologies impact the lives of affected populations

Q&A: Humanitarian operations, the spread of harmful information and data protection

“Doing no harm” in the digital age: What the digitalization of cash means for humanitarian action / Jo Burton

Humanitarian aid in the age of COVID-19: A review of big data crisis analytics and the General Data Protection Regulation /

Theodora Gazi, Go to the author pageAlexandros Gazis

The struggle against sexual violence in conflict: Investigating the digital turn / Kristin Bergtora Sandvik, Kjersti Lohne

Media and compassion after digital war: Why digital media haven't transformed responses to human suffering in contemporary conflict / Andrew Hoskins

AI for humanitarian action: Human rights and ethics / Michael Pizzi, Mila Romanoff, Tim Engelhardt

Freedom of assembly under attack: General and indiscriminate surveillance and interference with internet communications / Ilia Siatitsa

Biases in machine learning models and big data analytics: The international criminal and humanitarian law implications / Nema Milaninia

Stepping back from the brink: Why multilateral regulation of autonomy in weapons systems is difficult, yet imperative and feasible / Frank Sauer

The changing role of multilateral forums in regulating armed conflict in the digital age /
Amandeep S. Gill

Twenty years on: International humanitarian law and the protection of civilians against the effects of cyber operations during armed conflicts / Laurent Gisel, Tilman Rodenhäuser, Knut Dörmann

The application of the principle of distinction in the cyber context: A Chinese perspective / Zhixiong Huang, Yaohui Ying

Hacking humanitarians: Defining the cyber perimeter and developing a cyber security strategy for international humanitarian organizations in digital transformation / Massimo Marelli

The updated ICRC Commentary on the Third Geneva Convention: A new tool to protect prisoners of war in the twenty-first century / Jemma Arman, Jean-Marie Henckaerts, Heleen Hiemstra, Kvitoslava Krotiuk

The camera and the Red Cross: “Lamentable pictures” and conflict photography bring into focus an international movement, 1855–1865 / Sonya de Laat

Book review: "Digital Witness: Using Open Source Information for Human Rights Investigation, Documentation, and Accountability" / Emma Irving

Book review: "The Persistence of Reciprocity in International Humanitarian Law" / Matthias Vanhullebusch

Librarian’s Pick: "Transitional Justice and the 'Disappeared' of Northern Ireland: Silence, Memory, and the Construction of the Past" / Charlotte Mohr

ICRC Position Paper: Artificial intelligence and machine learning in armed conflict: A human-centred approach

ICRC Position Paper: International humanitarian law and cyber operations during armed conflicts

The ICRC Library goes digital

ICRC-affiliated reports: Digital technologies and war

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