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Military-age males in counterinsurge...
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Shoker, Sarah.
Military-age males in counterinsurgency and drone warfare
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Military-age males in counterinsurgency and drone warfareby Sarah Shoker.
作者:
Shoker, Sarah.
出版者:
Cham :Springer International Publishing :2021.
面頁冊數:
xii, 266 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
標題:
CounterinsurgencyUnited States.
電子資源:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-52474-6
ISBN:
9783030524746$q(electronic bk.)
Military-age males in counterinsurgency and drone warfare
Shoker, Sarah.
Military-age males in counterinsurgency and drone warfare
[electronic resource] /by Sarah Shoker. - Cham :Springer International Publishing :2021. - xii, 266 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Chapter 1. Introduction: Who Counts? -- Chapter 2. Producing the Not-Civilian: Military-Age Males as Visual Identifier -- Chapter 3. Risk-Management and Humanitarian War -- Chapter 4. Learning to See Data: Military-Age Males and Drone Warfare -- Chapter 5. Conclusion: The Future of Warfare.
This book documents the political ecosystem that legitimized violent military action against military-age males in US military operations after September 11, 2001. It first introduces the military-age male as a category used to identify insurgent combatants who have blended into civilian environments. Though US officials maintained that military-age males were not automatically assumed to be combatants, defense and intelligence professionals nevertheless used biases related to gender, age, religion and race to interpret the battlespace. Based on an analysis of the Obama administration's decision to exclude adolescent boys and men from drone warfare's collateral damage count, and an examination of similar problems with combatant identification under the Bush administration, the author argues that the military-age male category contributed to the deterioration of civilian protection. The concluding chapters discusses the link between counterinsurgency, drone warfare, and emerging trends in artificial intelligence and autonomy in weapons systems, highlighting the relation between algorithmic discrimination and the misidentification of civilians as combatants. Dr. Sarah Shoker is Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Waterloo, Canada.
ISBN: 9783030524746$q(electronic bk.)
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-030-52474-6doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
470957
Counterinsurgency
--United States.
LC Class. No.: U241 / .S56 2021
Dewey Class. No.: 355.0218
Military-age males in counterinsurgency and drone warfare
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Chapter 1. Introduction: Who Counts? -- Chapter 2. Producing the Not-Civilian: Military-Age Males as Visual Identifier -- Chapter 3. Risk-Management and Humanitarian War -- Chapter 4. Learning to See Data: Military-Age Males and Drone Warfare -- Chapter 5. Conclusion: The Future of Warfare.
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This book documents the political ecosystem that legitimized violent military action against military-age males in US military operations after September 11, 2001. It first introduces the military-age male as a category used to identify insurgent combatants who have blended into civilian environments. Though US officials maintained that military-age males were not automatically assumed to be combatants, defense and intelligence professionals nevertheless used biases related to gender, age, religion and race to interpret the battlespace. Based on an analysis of the Obama administration's decision to exclude adolescent boys and men from drone warfare's collateral damage count, and an examination of similar problems with combatant identification under the Bush administration, the author argues that the military-age male category contributed to the deterioration of civilian protection. The concluding chapters discusses the link between counterinsurgency, drone warfare, and emerging trends in artificial intelligence and autonomy in weapons systems, highlighting the relation between algorithmic discrimination and the misidentification of civilians as combatants. Dr. Sarah Shoker is Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Waterloo, Canada.
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