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Comment and Technology

Could non-lethal weapons increase conflict?

By Michael Bond

17 September 2008

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

THE world has embarked on a new arms race – and rather than nuclear warheads, the currency this time is arms that don’t kill. Governments, armies and police forces hope that “non-lethal” weapons will not only offer more effective methods of crowd control, but help draw a line under the bloody conflicts of the 20th century. The philosophy – if we can’t stop people fighting let’s try to stop them killing – seems admirable. But there’s a catch. In many situations NLWs may cause more suffering than they prevent.

The field took off in 1996, when the US Department of Defense set up…

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