Mini-symposium on Military Applications of Robotics
Location and time
TOC Ariake, Room WG201 (5 min walk from IROS venue, see map below)
19:30 - 21:30, November 6th (Wednesday), 2013
Topics
- Are robotic weapons just like any other weapon ?
- Should robotic weapons be banned or encouraged ?
- What stance and actions should we take as robotics researchers ?
Military robots are no more restricted to science-fiction novels or to a distant future but have become a concrete reality. Autonomous aerial robots – or drones – are for instance currently deployed, mainly by the US Army, in several countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, or Somalia. According to independent investigations, such robots have caused several thousands of casualties, including a non-negligible number of civilians. As a result, military applications of robotics are focusing a large attention from the civil society, prompting field researches on the consequences of drone strikes, as well as legal and ethical debates about this new military technology. The case is considered so serious that the UN has recently decided to set up dedicated investigations into US drone strikes.
At the same time, within the academic robotics research community, there are a considerable number of programs that are motivated by military applications and/or funded by military agencies. Many of the advances obtained in such programs have been or will be used in building operational military robots. It is thus evident that robotics researchers, who stand at the very beginning of the chain that eventually leads to operational military robots, must take an important part in the societal debate mentioned above.
The goal of this mini-symposium is to stimulate the debate on military applications within the robotics community. To this end, we shall briefly present facts and data about the current research and deployments of military robots (technologies, casualties, economic and psychological consequences, etc.), as well as elements of legal and ethical reflections about military robots. The major part of the symposium will then be dedicated to the open discussion among the participants.
Short introductions
- Survey of recent reports on the use and consequences of military robots (Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Stanford and NYU law schools, etc.) (by LR)
- Elements of legal and ethical reflections about military robots (by QCP)
Organizers
- Quang-Cuong Pham, Assistant Professor, NTU, Singapore (cuong.pham [at] normalesup.org)
- Ludovic Righetti, Group Leader, MPI, Germany (ludovic.righetti [at] tuebingen.mpg.de)
Access
- Address : TOC Ariake, Room WG 201, 3-5-7 Ariake, Koto-ku, Tokyo 135-0063
- Phone number : 080-4772-3207
- Flyer [pdf]
Links
- Living under Drones: Death, Injury, and Trauma to Civilians From US Drone Practices in Pakistan, a comprehensive report by the Law Schools of Standford and of NYU denouncing the killings of civilians and the terror caused by US drones in Pakistan;
- Losing Humanity: the Case against Killer Robots, a report by Human Rights Watch discussing the legal and ethical implications of military robots and calling for their interdiction;
- Between a Drone and Al-Qaeda, another report by Human Rights Watch, about US targeted killings in Yemen;
- Will I be next?, a report by Amnesty International about US drone strikes in Pakistan;
- Covert Drone War, latest information from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism on drone deployments;
- ICRAC, the International Committee for Robot Arms Control;
- Possible UN investigations into US drone strikes.