Stockdale Center for Ethical Leadership

-
Dr. Jeff Black
-
Dr. Michael Skerker
- The Moral Equality of Combatants: A New Theory of Just War (2020)
- Military Virtues, co-series editor with David Whetham, (Hampshire, UK: Howgate Publishing, 2019)
- Sovereignty and the New Executive Authority, co-editor with Claire Finkelstein, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018).
-
Dr. Michael Robbillard
- Who Should Die?: Liability and Killing in War, Co-edited with Dr. Ryan Jenkins and Dr. Bradley J. Strawser. Oxford University Press 2017
- “Fighting for One’s Self,” in Who Should Die?: Liability and Killing in War, Co-edited with Dr. Ryan Jenkins and Dr. Bradley J. Strawser. Oxford University Press 2017
- “No Such Thing as Killer Robots” Journal of Applied Ethics 2017
- “The Moral Exploitation of Soldiers”, Public Affairs Quarterly, April 2016, co-written with Dr. Bradley Strawser
- “Risk, War, and the Dangers of Soldier Identity” Journal of Military Ethics 2016.
-
Dr. Asheen Bagnulo
- Bagnulo, Ashleen. "Officer Resignation and the Space Between Theory and Practice: Disputatio Sine Fine." Armed Forces and Society 45, no. 3 (2018): 532-545.
-
Dr. Jessica Wolfendale
- War Crimes: Causes, Excuses, and Blame (with Matthew Talbert), Oxford University Press, USA, 2018
- “Moral Security,” Journal of Political Philosophy 25(2): 238-255, 2017.
- “Is Obedience a Virtue?” Military Virtues (Issues in Military Ethics series), eds Michael Skerker and David Whetham (Howgate, forthcoming)
- “Defining War,” in Soft War: The Ethics of Unarmed Conflict, eds Michael Gross & Tami Meisels (Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 16-33
-
Dr. Joe Capizzi
- Politics, Justice, and War: Christian Governance and the Ethics of Warfare (Oxford Studies in Theological Ethics) (OUP, 2015)
-
Dr. Joe Capizzi
- Politics, Justice, and War: Christian Governance and the Ethics of Warfare (Oxford Studies in Theological Ethics) (OUP, 2015)
-
Dr. Scott Davis
- “The Elimination of ‘Violence’ in Just War Thinking,” Journal of Religion and Violence, 3/3, 2015, pp. 365-368
-
Dr. Jesse Kirkpatrick
- “Drones and the Martial Virtue Courage,” Journal of Military Ethics, 14(3).
- “Kirkpatrick’s Reply to Sparrow,” Journal of Military Ethics, 14(3).
- Super Soldiers and Virtue” in Developing the super soldier: enhancing military performance, G. Braun III W., von Hlatky, Stéfanie., and Richard Nossal, Kim. (eds.) The Kingston Conference on International Security Series. (2018).
- “Drones and State Responsibility,” in Di Nucci, Ezio and Filippo Santoni de Sio (eds.) Drones and Responsibility: Legal, Philosophical and Socio-Technical Perspectives on the Use of Remotely Controlled Weapons. Ashgate (2016).
- “Military Drone Operators Risk a Serious Injury You Might Not Expect,” Slate Magazine.January 2016. (Conceived of as a result of fellowship, directly tied to my JME article)
- “Syrian Civil War Heightens Polio Risk,” op-ed, Baltimore Sun, December 9, 2013. (wrote and published while a fellow)
-
Dr. Scott Davis
- “The Elimination of ‘Violence’ in Just War Thinking,” Journal of Religion and Violence, 3/3, 2015, pp. 365-368
-
Dr. Alec Chance
- “Realpolitik, Punishment and Control: Thucydides on the Moralization of Conflict,” Journal of Military Ethics (2013)
-
Dr. Chris Eberle
- Justice and the Just War Tradition: Human Worth, Moral Formation, and Armed Conflict (Routledge, 2016)
-
Dr. Randall Dipert
- The Future Impact of a Long Period of Limited Cyberwarfare on the Ethics of Warfare (2014)
- Distinctive Ethical Issues of Cyberwarfare (2014)
- Towards a Cognitive System for Decision Support in Cyber Operations (2013)
- Other-than-internet (oti) cyberwarfare: Challenges for ethics, law, and policy (2013)
- The Ethics of Cyberwarfare (2010)
-
Dr. Brad Strawser
- Who Should Die? The Ethics of Killing in War,with Ryan Jenkins and Michael Robillard (Oxford University Press, 2017).
- Binary Bullets: The Ethics of Cyberwar, with Adam Henschke and Fritz Allhoff (Oxford University Press, 2016).
- Killing bin Laden: A Moral Analysis(Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
- Responsibilities to Protect: Perspectives in Theory and Practice, with David Whetham (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2015).
- Military Ethics and Emerging Technologies,with Timothy J. Demy and George R. Lucas (Routledge, 2014).
- Opposing Perspectives on the Drone Debate (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
- Killing By Remote Control: The Ethics of an Unmanned Military(Oxford University Press, May 2012).
- “The Moral Exploitation of Soldiers,” with Michael Robillard, Public Affairs Quarterly30, no. 2 (April 2016): 171 – 196.
- “Autonomous Machines, Moral Judgment, and Acting for the Right Reasons,” with Duncan Purves and Ryan Jenkins, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 18, no. 4(August 2015): 851-872.
- “Assessment, Proportionality, and Justice in War,” with Russell Muirhead, in Assessing War: The Challenge of Measuring Success and Failure, edited by Leo J. Blanken, Jason J. Lepore, and Hy Rothstein (Georgetown University Press, 2015).
- “Moral Cyber Weapons,” with Dorothy E. Denning, in The Ethics of Information Warfare,edited by Luciano Floridi and Mariarosaria Taddeo (Springer Philosophy & Engineering Technology Series, April 2014).
- “Active Cyber Defense: Applying Air Defense to the Cyber Domain,” with Dorothy E. Denning, in Cyber Analogies, edited by John Arquilla and Emily O. Goldman, Technical Report sponsored by United States Cyber Command, (Monterey, CA: Department of Defense Information Operations Center for Research, Naval Postgraduate School, 2014).
- “Defensive Interrogational Torture and Epistemic Limitations”Public Affairs Quarterly, Vol 27, no. 4 (October 2013): 311-340.
- “Revisionist Just War Theory and the Real World: A Cautiously Optimistic Proposal,” in Routledge Handbook of Ethics and War: Just War in the 21st Century, edited by Fritz Allhoff, Adam Henschke, & Nick Evans, (Routledge Press, 2013). ISBN 9781138953048
- Guest Editor: Journal of Military Ethics, Vol. 12, no. 1, 2013; Special Issue: “Cyberwar and Ethics.”
-
Dr. Pano Yannakogeorgos
- The Cyber Threat and Globalization: Challenges to National and International Security (Rowman & Littlefield 2018)
- “Internet Governance and National Security” in Gary Schaub Understanding Cybersecurity: Emerging Governance and Strategy. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2018)
- “Stuxnet as Cyber Enabled Sanctions Enforcement” Proceedings from CYCON-US (October 2016)
- "The rise of IPv6: Benefits and Costs of Transforming Military Cyberspace." Air & Space Power Journal (29, no. 2 2015): 103.
- “走向中美网络关系共同安全平台” (“Towards a Common Security Platform for Sino-US Cyber Relations”) in Air and Space Power Journal- Chinese (Vol. 28, No. 5, Sept/October 2014) 63-71.
- “Rethinking the Threat of Cyberterrorism” in Cyber-Terrorism: Technical, Political and Legal Perspectives. Tom Chen, et. Al. (New York, NY: Springer 2014) 43-62.
- Conflict and Cooperation in Cyberspace: The Challenge to National Security. Eds. Panayotis A. Yannakogeorgos & Adam Lowther (New York, NY: Taylor and Francis 2013).
- Strategies for Resolving the Cyber Attribution Challenge (Montgomery, AL: Air University Press) Autumn 2013.
- “Keep Cyber War Narrow,” The National Interest (May 17, 2013) http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/keep-cyberwar-narrow-8459
- “Considerations on Emergent Cyber Trends and Technologies” in Topics for Operational Considerations: Insights from Neurobiology & Neuropsychology on Influence and Extremism—An Operational Perspective. Eds. Marty Reynolds and David Lyle (Joint Chiefs of Staff, April 2013) 18-25.
- “Internet Governance and National Security” Strategic Studies Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 3 (Fall 2012) 102-125.
-
Dr. Henri Hude
- La Formation des Décideurs: Méditations sur un Humanisme qui Vient (2018)
-
Dr. Valerie Morevicius
- Realist Ethics: Just War Traditions as Power Politics (Cambridge, 2018)
- “Protestant Christianity,” in Religion, War and Ethics: A Sourcebook of Textual Traditions, eds. Gregory M. Reichberg and Henrik Syse, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2014, 235-299.
- “Changing the Rules of the Game: A Just Peace Critique of Just War Thought,” Nova et Vetera, 10(4), 2011, 1115-1140.
-
Dr. William H. Shaw
- Utilitarianism and the Ethics of War (London and New York: Routledge, 2016).
- “Utilitarianism and the Ethics of War” in Ben Eggleston and Dale Miller, eds., The Cambridge Companion to Utilitarianism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014), pp. 303-324.
- “Consequentialism, War, and National Defense,” Journal of International Political Theory, vol. 10, no. 1 (February 2014), pp. 20–37.
- “Just War Theory,” in William H. Shaw, ed., Social and Personal Ethics, 8th (Belmont, Calif: Wadsworth/Cengage Learning, 2014), pp. 341–7.
- “Business Ethics and Military Ethics: A Study in Comparative Applied Ethics,” Journal of Applied Ethics and Philosophy (Japan), Vol. 4 (August 2012), pp. 22–32.
- “Utilitarianism and Recourse to War,” Utilitas, 23, no. 4 (December 2011), pp. 380-401.
-
Dr. Stephen Coleman
- Military Ethics: An Introduction with Case Studies (OUP, 2012)
-
Brigadier General Richard O'Meara USA (Ret.)
- Governing Military Technologies in the 21st Century, Ethics and Operations (Palgrave/Macmillan)
- “Contemporary Governance Architecture Regarding Robotics Technologies: An Assessment,” Robot Ethics, The Ethics and Social Implications of Robotics (MIT Press, 2014)
- “Jus Post Bellum: War Closure in the 21st Century,” Routledge Handbook of Ethics and War, Just War Theory in the 21st Century (Routledge, 2013)
- “Jus Post Bellum: Reflections on the Right Way to End a War, Journal on Terrorism and Security Analysis (2011)
- International Governance of Autonomous Military Robots, Columbia Science and Technology Law Review (Columbia University School of Law, 2011)
-
Dr. Patrick Lin
- Ethics of Hacking Back: Six Arguments from Armed Conflict to Zombies, 34-page report funded by US National Science Foundation (Cal Poly, SLO, 26 Sept 2016)
- Enhanced Warfighters: Risk, Ethics, and Policy, 114-page report funded by The Greenwall Foundation (Cal Poly SLO and Case Western Reserve Univ., 1 Jan 2013) (co-written by Max Mehlman and Keith Abney).
- “Arctic 2.0: How Artificial Intelligence Can Help Develop a Frontier”, Ethics and International Affairs, Summer 2019, forthcoming (co-written with Fritz Allhoff).
- “Ethical Questions Need to be Answered About Cyberweapons” in Noel Merino (ed.) Cybercrime(Greenhaven Press, 2016) (co-written with Fritz Allhoff and Neil Rowe).
- “I, Spy Robot: The Ethics of Robots in National Intelligence Activities” in Jai Galliott and Warren Reed (eds.) Ethics and the Future of Spying: Technology, National Security, and Intelligence Collection(Routledge, 2016) (co-written with Shannon Ford).
- “Military Neuroenhancement and Risk Assessment” in James Giordano (ed.), Neuroscience and Neurotechnology in National Security and Defense: Practical Considerations, Ethical Concerns(Taylor & Francis Group, 2014) (co-written with Keith Abney and Maxwell Mehlman).
- “Super Soldiers: What Is Military Human Enhancement?” in Steve Thompson (ed.) Global Issues and Ethical Concerns in Human Enhancement Technologies(IGI Global, 2014) (co-written with Keith Abney and Maxwell Mehlman).
- “Super Soldiers: The Ethical, Legal, and Operational Implications” in Steve Thompson (ed.) Global Issues and Ethical Concerns in Human Enhancement Technologies(IGI Global, 2014)(co-written with Keith Abney and Maxwell Mehlman).
- “Is Warfare the Right Frame for the Cyber Debate?” in Luciano Floridi and Mariarosaria Taddeo (eds.), The Ethics of Information Warfare(Springer, 2014) (co-written with Fritz Allhoff and Keith Abney).
- “Ethics, War, and Robots” in Ronald Sandler (ed.), Ethics and Emerging Technologies(Palgrave-Macmillan, 2013) (co-written with Keith Abney and George Bekey).
- “Enhanced Warfighters: A Policy Framework” in Michael Gross and Don Carrick (eds.), Military Medical Ethics for the 21stCentury (Ashgate, 2013) (co-written with Maxwell Mehlman and Keith Abney).
- “War 2.0: Cyberweapons and Ethics”, Communications of the ACM, March 2012, vol. 55, no. 3: 24-26 (co-written with Fritz Allhoff and Neil Rowe).
- “International Governance of Autonomous Military Robotics”, Columbia Science and Technology Law Review, June 2011, vol. 12, article 7 (co-written with Gary Marchant, Braden Allenby, Ronald Arkin, Edward Barrett, Jason Borenstein, Lyn Gaudet, Orde Kittrie, George R. Lucas, Richard O’Meara, and Jared Silberman).
- “AI Military Robots Can Be Programmed to Act Ethically,” in Noah Berlatsky (ed.), Opposing Viewpoints: Artificial Intelligence(Cengage/Greenhaven Press, June 2011) (co-written with Keith Abney and George Bekey).
- “Robot Ethics: Mapping the Issues for a Mechanized World”, Artificial Intelligence, April 2011, vol. 175, no. 5-6: 942-949 (co-written with Keith Abney and George Bekey).
- “Ethical Blowback from Emerging Technologies”, Journal of Military Ethics, December 2010, vol. 9, no. 4: 313-331.
-
Dr. Brad Allenby
- R. Allenby. 2018. “Designer warriors: Altering conflict—and humanity itself?”,
- Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 74(6): 379-384, DOI: 10.1080/00963402.2018.1533194
- R. Allenby. 2017. “The Age of Weaponized Narrative,” Issues in Science and Technology, Summer 2017:65-70.
- R. Allenby. 2017. “Here Be Dragons: DARPA in the Age of Hybrid War,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00963402.2017.1315041, 25 April 2017, accessed April 25, 2017.
- R. Allenby. 2016. “In an Age of Civilizational Conflict,” Jurimetrics 56(4):387-406 (Summer 2016).
- R. Allenby, T. Frame, and A. Ellner, eds. 2017. Moral Injury: Towards an International Perspective. Washington, DC: New America/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War.
- R. Allenby and J. Garreau, eds. 2017. Weaponized Narrative: The New Battlespace. Washington, DC: New America Foundation/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War.
- R. Allenby. 2016. Future Conflict & Emerging Technologies. Tempe, AZ: ASU Consortium for Science and Policy Outcomes.
- R. Allenby, ed. 2015. The Applied Ethics of Emerging Military and Security Technologies. Farnham, UK: Ashgate Press.
- R. Allenby. 2018. “Respecting Moral Injury,” in R. E. Meagher and D. A. Pryer, War and Moral Injury: A Reader. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, pp. 256-269.
- R. Allenby and T. Frame. 2017. “Moral Injury,” in B. R. Allenby, T. Frame, and A. Ellner, eds., Moral Injury: Towards an International Perspective. Washington, DC: New America/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War, pp. 5-9.
- R. Allenby. 2017. “Moral Injury and Identity,” in B. R. Allenby, T. Frame, and A. Ellner, eds., Moral Injury: Towards an International Perspective. Washington, DC: New America/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War, pp. 49-54.
- R. Allenby and T. Frame. 2017. “What Is To Be Done?,” in B. R. Allenby, T. Frame, and A. Ellner, eds. 2017. Moral Injury: Towards an International Perspective. Washington, DC: New America/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War, pp. 55-60.
- Allenby. 2017. “The End of Enlightenment 1.0: Why Weaponized narrative won’t Go Away,” in B. R. Allenby and J. Garreau, eds. Weaponized Narrative: The New Battlespace. Washington, DC: New America Foundation/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War, pp. 15-19.
- Allenby and J. Garreau. 2017. “Weaponized Narrative Is the New Battlespace: And the U.S. Is in the Unaccustomed Position of Being Seriously Behind Its Adversaries,” in B. R. Allenby and J. Garreau, eds. Weaponized Narrative: The New Battlespace. Washington, DC: New America Foundation/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War, p. 5-9.
- M. Sanger and B. R. Allenby. 2017. “Marines: Tell it To,” in B. R. Allenby and J. Garreau, eds. Weaponized Narrative: The New Battlespace. Washington, DC: New America Foundation/Arizona State University Center on the Future of War, p. 28-30.
-
Dr. Max Mehlman
- Genomic Medicine in the Military, 1 npj Genomic Medicine art. 15008 (2016) (with De Castro, Biesecker, Turner, Brenner, Witkop, Bradburne, and Green).
- Captain American and Iron Man: Biological, Genetic, and Psychological Enhancement and the Warrior Ethos in Routledge Handbook of Military Ethics 406-420 (G. Lucas ed. Routledge, 2015).
- Military Neuroenhancement and Risk Assessment in Neurotechnology in National Security and Defense 227-238 (James Giordano ed. Boca Raton FL: CRC Press 2015) (with Abney and Lin).
- A Framework for Military Bioethics, 13 Journal of Military Ethics 331 (2014) (with Corley).
- Super Soldiers (Part 1): What is Military Human Enhancement? in Global Issues and Ethical Considerations in Human Enhancement Technologies (Stephen John Thompson ed. Hershey, PA, IGI Global 2014) (with Lin, Abney, and Galliott).
- Super Soldiers (Part 2): The Ethical, Legal, and Operational Implications in Global issues and Ethical Considerations in Human Enhancement Technologies (Stephen John Thompson ed. Hershey, PA, IGI Global 2014) (with others).
- Ethical, Legal, Social, and Policy Issues in the Use of Genomic Technology by the U.S. Military, Journal of Law and the Biosciences (doi:10.1093/jlb/Isu021 (2014) (with Tracy Yeheng Li) (reprinted in Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, vol. 47, 2015).
- Soldier Enhancement in Encyclopedia of Bioethics 3176-3179 (Bruce Jennings ed., Farmington Hills, MI: Macmillan Reference USA 2014).
- Enhanced Warfighters: A Policy Framework (with Patrick Lin and Keith Abney) in Military Medical Ethics for the 21stCentury (M. Gross and D. Carrick eds. Surrey, UK; Ashgate Publishing Ltd. 2013).
- Enhanced Warfighters: Risk, Ethics, and Policy (Greenwall Foundation 2013) (with Patrick Lin and Keith Abney).
- Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps entitled “The Bioethics of Military Performance-Enhancement.” (forthcoming)