Notes on contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Thinking Ethically about Drone Violence, Christian Enemark; 1. Riskless Warfare Revisited: Drones, Asymmetry, and the Just Use of Force, Robert Sparrow; 2. Jus ad Vim and Drone Warfare: A Classical Just War Perspective,
Christian Nikolaus Braun; 3. The Complicated Reality of Drone Strikes for Law Enforcement, Max Brookman-Byrne; 4. Drone Violence as Wild Justice: Administrative Executions on the Terror Frontier, Christian Enemark; 5. ‘A new departure’: Britain’s Lethal Drone Policy and the Range of Justice, Christopher J. Fuller; 6. Ethics for Drone Operators: Rules versus Virtues, Peter Olsthoorn; 7. Drone Warriors, Revealed Humanity, and a Feminist Ethics of Care, Lindsay C. Clark and Christian Enemark; 8. Armed Drone Systems: the Ethical Challenge of Replacing Human Control with Increasingly Autonomous Elements, Peter Lee; 9. Autonomous Armed Drones and the Challenges to Multilateral Consensus on Value-Based Regulation, Thompson Chengeta; Conclusion, Christian Enemark; Index.