290,277 research outputs found
Proportionality and its Applicability in the Realm of Cyber Attacks
With an ever-increasing reliance on State cyber-attacks, the need for an international treaty governing the actions of Nation-States in the realm of cyberwarfare has never been greater. States now have the ability to cause unprecedented civilian loss with their cyber actions. States can destroy financial records, disrupt stock markets, manipulate cryptocurrency, shut off nuclear reactors, turn off power grids, open dams, and even shut down air traffic control systems with the click of a mouse. This article argues that any cyber-attack launched with a reasonable expectation to inflict “incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, or damage to civilian objects,” must be subject to the existing laws of proportionality. This article further examines the broader concept of proportionality, and the difficulties associated with applying a proportionality analysis to an offensive cyber-strike. This paper asserts that the ambiguities and complexities associated with applying the law of proportionality—in its current state and within a cyber context—will leave civilian populations vulnerable to the aggressive cyber actions of the world’s cyber powers. Consequently, this article stresses the necessity of developing a proportionality standard within a unified international cyberwarfare convention and asserts that such a standard is required in order to prevent the creation of a pathway towards lethal cyber aggressions unrestrained by the laws of war
The teleological account of proportional surveillance
This article analyses proportionality as a potential element of a theory of
morally justified surveillance, and sets out a teleological account. It draws on
conceptions in criminal justice ethics and just war theory, defines teleological
proportionality in the context of surveillance, and sketches some of the central
values likely to go into the consideration. It then explores some of the ways in
which deontologists might want to modify the account and illustrates the
difficulties of doing so. Having set out the account, however, it considers whether
the proportionality condition is necessary to a theory of morally justified
surveillance. The article concludes that we need and should apply only a necessity
condition, but notes that proportionality considerations may retain some use in in
practice, as a form of coarse‐grained filter applied before assessing necessity when
deliberating the permissibility of potential forms of surveillance
Natural Resource Distribution and Multiple Forms of Civil War
We examine how natural resource location, rent sharing and fighting capacities of different groups matter for ethnic conflict. A new type of bargaining failure due to multiple types of potential con.icts (and hence multiple threat points) is identified. The theory predicts conflict to be more likely when the geographical distribution of natural resources is uneven and when a minority group has better chances to win a secessionist rather than a centrist con.ict. For sharing rents, resource proportionality is salient in avoiding secessions and strength proportionality in avoiding centrist civil wars. We present empirical evidence that is consistent with the model.Natural Resources, Conflict, Strength Proportionality, Resource Proportionality, Secession, Bargaining Failure.
The early warning system and the monti II regulation: the case for a political interpretation
Human rights protection - Proportionality - Deference - Procedural rationality - Process-review - Interplay national courts and Strasbourg court
Theorem on the proportionality of inertial and gravitational masses in classical mechanics
We considered the problem of the proportionality of inertial and
gravitational masses in classical mechanics. We found that the kinetic energy
of a material mass point m in a circular motion with a constant angular
velocity around another material point M depends only on its gravitational
mass. This fact, together with the known result that the straight line is a
circumference with an infinite radius, allowed us to prove the proportionality
between the inertial and gravitational masses.Comment: ReVTeX file, 10p
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