RFC-027: IHL-Aligned Governance — Protected Persons and Humanitarian Context — 16. Additional References
AIGP Specification › RFC-027: IHL-Aligned Governance — Protected Persons and Humanitarian Context › 16. Additional References
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16. Additional References
International Humanitarian Law (Primary Sources)
- Fourth Geneva Convention (GCIV), 1949 — Protection of Civilian Persons
- Third Geneva Convention (GCIII), 1949 — Treatment of Prisoners of War
- Additional Protocol I (AP I), 1977 — International Armed Conflicts
- Additional Protocol II (AP II), 1977 — Non-International Armed Conflicts
- Hague Regulations, 1907 — Laws and Customs of War on Land
- Rome Statute of the ICC, Art. 8 (War Crimes), 1998
AI and Armed Conflict
- ICRC, “Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning in Armed Conflict: A Human-Centred Approach,” 2021
- ICRC, “International Humanitarian Law and the Challenges of Contemporary Armed Conflicts,” 2019
- ICRC, “Autonomy, Artificial Intelligence and Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems,” 2019
- ICRC, Position Paper: “Autonomous Weapon Systems: Technical, Military, Legal and Humanitarian Aspects,” 2014
- Scharre, P. Army of None: Autonomous Weapons and the Future of War. W.W. Norton, 2018
- Crootof, R. “Autonomous Weapon Systems and the Limits of Analogy.” Harvard National Security Journal, 2015
- Gillard, E. “Proportionality in the Conduct of Hostilities.” Chatham House, 2018
Legal and Regulatory Frameworks
- Tallinn Manual 2.0 on International Law Applicable to Cyber Operations (Cambridge, 2017)
- Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UN Ruggie Principles), 2011
- The Oxford Handbook on the International Law of Global Security, 2021
- CCW Discussions on Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (2014–present)
- EU AI Act — Art. 6, 9, 14
- NIST AI RMF — GOVERN 1.1, MAP 1.1, MANAGE 3.1
Data Protection in Humanitarian Contexts
- UNHCR Policy on the Protection of Personal Data of Persons of Concern, 2015
- OCHA Data Responsibility Guidelines, 2021
- ICRC Handbook on Data Protection in Humanitarian Action, 2nd ed., 2020
- The Signal Code: A Human Rights Approach to Information During Crisis (Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, 2017)
- Brussels Privacy Hub, “Data Protection in Humanitarian Emergencies,” 2017
AIGP Protocol References
- RFC-010: AIGP Core Protocol
- RFC-010b: Temporal Evidence Chaining
- RFC-020: Governed Autonomy, Symbolic Intent, and D-DNA Evidence
- RFC-024: D-DNA for Governed Autonomy
- RFC-025: Cognitive Harm Governance
- RFC-026: User Feedback Signal