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Journal Article

Citation

Wall T, Monahan T. Theor. Criminol. 2011; 15(3): 239-254.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1362480610396650

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

As surveillance and military devices, drones--or 'unmanned aerial vehicles'--offer a prism for theorizing the technological politics of warfare and governance. This prism reveals some violent articulations of US imperialism and nationalism, the dehumanizing translation of bodies into 'targets' for remote monitoring and destruction, and the insidious application of militarized systems and rationalities to domestic territories and populations. In this article, we analyze the deployment of drones within warzones in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan and borderzones and urban areas in the USA. What we call 'the drone stare' is a type of surveillance that abstracts people from contexts, thereby reducing variation, difference, and noise that may impede action or introduce moral ambiguity. Through these processes, drones further normalize the ongoing subjugation of those marked as Other.

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