The 4th Young Researchers Workshop
Human Enhancement and Advanced Technologies in Terrorism and Belligerencies
University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel

October 6, 10, 11 and 13, 2021

Organizer and coordinator of the workshop: Adv. Ido Rosenzweig

Human enhancement and advanced technologies have already had significant effects over the framework of terrorism and belligerency, and these effects are expected to increase rapidly in the coming years. Such effects include internal and external mechanisms such as computerized exoskeleton, advanced prostheses, and cognitive advancement.

The workshop focusses on the framework of “human enhancement and advanced technologies” technological, comparative, doctrinal, historical, philosophical, sociological and theoretical perspectives. 

Structure of Workshop

The workshop will feature nine (9) papers selected through a call for submissions. Participants are from all over the world: Poland, Germany, Canada, Republic of North Macedonia, Hungary and Brazil.

Due to COVID-19, the workshop will be held virtually.

The participants will convene for four sessions of presentations and discussions. During each session, participants will present their papers to the workshop group (apx. 20-30 minutes), followed by comments and feedback from a senior researcher or practitioner. Following each presentation there will be an open discussion among participants.

Program

October 6 – 15:00 – 19:00 CET (16:00-20:00 Israel time)

Prof. Eli Salzberger, head of the Minerva Center for the Rule of Law under Extreme Conditions – Openning greetings

Hannah Kiel: U.S. Drone Operations and Ramstein Air Base in German Courts: Implications from German Domestic Caselaw for the International Discourse on Human Rights
Respondent: Emanuela Gillard, Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict

Link to recording on YouTube

Joao Fabiano: Should Weaponised Moral Enhancement Replace Lethal Aggression in War?
Respondent: Pei-hua Huang, Erasmus Medical Centre

Link to recording on YouTube

October 10 – 15:00 – 19:00 CET(16:00-20:00 Israel time)

Kaja Kowalczewska: Is there a Duty to Protect the Right of Life of State’s Own Soldiers by Pre-empting Fear and Anxiety Through the Cognitive Enhancement?
Respondent: Ziv Bohrer, Bar Ilan University, Faculty of Law

Link to recording on YouTube

Ivan Ristov: Digital Reality and Spreading of Misknowledge, Potential Radicalization, and the Need for 21st-Century Skills
Respondent: Leyla Tavernaro-Haidarian, Senior Researcher, University of Johannesburg, Department of Communication

Link to recording on YouTube

October 11 – 15:00 – 19:00 CET(16:00-20:00 Israel time)

Zénó Suller: The Rule of Law when Fear Rules – An Interdisciplinary Study on Technological Advancement and International Norms on Terrorism
Respondent: Amnon Reichman, University of Haifa, Faculty of Law

Link to recording on YouTube

Leah West: The deployment of Facial Recognition Glasses in Armed Conflict: A Case Study of the Relationship between Privacy and Precaution
Respondent: Brig. Gen. (ret.) Kenneth Watkin, Former Judge Advocate General for the Canadian Forces

Link to recording on YouTube

October 13 – 12:00 – 17:00 CET (13:00-18:00 Israel time)

Agata Kleczkowska: The Implications of Use of Autonomous Self-defense Systems
Respondent: Yahli Shereshevsky, University of Haifa, Faculty of Law

Link to recording on YouTube

Magda Pacholska: Military AI and the Principle of Distinction: A Perspective on State Responsibility
Respondent: Katharine Fortin, Utrecht University-School of Law

Link to recording on YouTube

 

Monday, January 17

10:00 – 10:10 –

Eli Salzberger, Head of the Minerva Center for the Rule of Law under Extreme Conditions, Opening words

10:10 – 11:20 –

Elena Abrusci, Brunel University London, A local response to a global phenomenon? The role of national, regional and international human rights institutions in supporting social media companies tackling online hate speech.

Chair: Gad Barzilai, University of Haifa

11:20 – 11:30 –

Coffee break

11:30 – 12:40 –

Tegan Snyman, Erasmus School of Law, Recognising gender identity as an internationally protected ground against hate speech.

Chair: Ido Rosenzweig, University of Haifa

12:40 – 12:50 –

Coffee break

12:50 – 14:00 –

Giovanni De Gregorio, Centre for Socio-legal Studies, University of Oxford, The Lawlessness of Moderating Online Hate Speech.

Chair: Karolina Placzynta, TU Berlin

Tuesday, January 18

10:10 – 11:10 –

Keynote presentation: Prof. Gabriel Weimann, Department of Communication at University of Haifa,  The Virus of Hate.

Chair: Dr. Martin Emmer, FU Berlin

11:10 – 11:25 –

Coffee break

11:25 – 12:35 –

Laura Dellagiacoma, IDZ, Online platforms users and the perpetration of online hate speech: the opposite effects of right-wing authoritarianism and social dominance orientation.

Chair: Laura Ascone, TU Berlin

12:35 – 12:50 –

Coffee break

12:50 – 14:00 –

Ursula Kristin Schmid, Department of Media and Communication, LMU Munich, How Social Media User Perceive Different Forms of Online Hate Speech.

Chair: Sünje Paasch-Colberg, FU Berlin

Wednesday, January 19

10:10 – 11:20 –

Efrat Fudem, College of Management & Assaf Derri, University of Haifa, Some of them Want to Abuse you: Re-adjusting Defamation Law to Combat Hate-Speech Abuses of Freedom of Speech.

Chair: Hadeel Abu Hussein, University of Haifa

11:20 – 11:35 –

Coffee break

11:35 – 12:45 –

Eva Nave, Leiden University, Online hate speech a legal conceptualization.

Chair: Anne van Aaken, University of Hamburg

12:45 – 13:00 –

Coffee break

13:00 – 14:10 –

Leon Ritter,  Hagen University, The Impact of National Hate Speech Regulations on Citizens’ Perceptions of Democratic Freedoms.

Chair: Amnon Reichman, University of Haifa, The Minerva Center for the Rule of Law under Extreme Conditions

14:10 – 14:30 –

Concluding remarks

 

For questions and requests please contact Ido Rosenzweig via ido.rose@gmail.com