<p>"A compelling account of the geopolitics of the drone as it haunts âpolicing, predation, and planet.â Ian G. R. Shaw's book is as attentive to the historical and cultural geographies of the unmanned aerial vehicle as it is to the preemptive foreclosure of political futures."âLouise Amoore, author of <i>The Politics of Possibility: Risk and Security Beyond Probability</i></p>
<p>"<i>Predator Empire</i> is an impressive and very timely text. This is a book that everybody concerned with the relationship between technology and security should take the opportunity to read."â<i>LSE Review of Books</i></p><p>"<i>Predator Empire </i>is a provocative analysis of the outreach of technology, specifically drones, as new tools to entrench U.S. power globally."â<i>Science</i></p><p>"In this timely and historically-engaged text, Shaw offers a distinct approach to the study of the drone in which the technology is apprehended as a more-than-human geopolitical actor, both the product and productive of practices of enclosure, atmospheric security, and policing. The result is a conceptually and contextually rich interrogation of the US drone programme, one yielding insights and analytic frameworks of utility beyond this focus."â<i>Antipode </i></p><p>"What sets Shawâs book apart, and one of its major contributions to the study of the drone, is its emphasis on the human condition."â<i>Society & Space</i><br /><br /> "<i>Predator Empire </i>is one of the most interesting books on drones and drone warfare to date. Its broader (theoretical) claims might require further elaboration, but its value as a theoretically and empirically rigorous book on drones remains evident." â<i>AAG Review of Books</i></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Ian G. R. Shaw is lecturer in human geography at the University of Glasgow.