01178nas a2200109 4500000000100000008004100001260001500042100002100057245014800078856009300226520074900319 2022 d c2022-12-061 aJonathan Herbach00aDual-use; Missile technology; Artificial intelligence; Cyber; Lethal autonomous weapons systems; WMD; Evolution of treaty regimes; Verification uhttps://www.elgaronline.com/edcollchap/book/9781788111904/book-part-9781788111904-11.xml3 aTechnology is a key factor in, and often catalyst for, arms control. The increasingly rapid pace of technological change with respect to weapons systems and military capabilities, as well as of developments of inherently dual-use technologies (with both peaceful and military applications), present clear challenges to the law of arms control, both in terms of the application and/or potential modification of existing instruments, as well as the prospects for new regulation where necessary. Not only are military technologies, or technologies with a potential military dimension, developing rapidly, but the increasing diffusion of such technologies to more and more states and possibly to non-state actors further complicates the situation.