Description
A study of how states can lawfully react to malicious cyber conduct, taking into account the problem of timely attribution.
About the Author
Henning Lahmann is a Senior Researcher at the Digital Society Institute in Berlin. In 2018, he received the Wolf Rudiger Bub Award for his doctoral degree in international law at the University of Potsdam. He held research positions at universities in Kiel, Potsdam, and Berlin. In 2019, he was a fellow at the Israel Public Policy Institute researching disinformation campaigns.
Reviews
'The book is remarkable in several aspects: firstly, it does give several new impulses to discussions surrounding cyber operations. This especially holds true for the analysis of customary necessity. Secondly, the author focusses on those areas that are in fact of practical relevance and not merely of an academic nature. Attribution is the essential part in this respect, as is the focus on unilateral remedies, especially those below the level of armed force ... Lahmann's demonstrated broad and well-founded knowledge, not only in the cyber context but in general international law as a whole, gives the author's arguments considerable weight.' Johann-Christoph Woltag, ZaoeRV/Heidelberg Journal of International Law
Book Information
ISBN 9781108479868
Author Henning Lahmann
Format Hardback
Page Count 334
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 590g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 156mm * 21mm