Droning On: Explaining the Proliferation of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Author:

Fuhrmann Matthew,Horowitz Michael C.

Abstract

AbstractUnmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), more popularly known as “drones,” have become emblematic of twenty-first century military technologies but scholars have yet to convincingly explain the drivers of UAV proliferation. Using the first systematic data set of UAV proliferation, this research note examines the spread of UAVs in the context of scholarly debates about interests versus capacity in explaining policy adoption. The results yield important insights for both IR scholarship and the policy-making community. While countries that experience security threats—including territorial disputes and terrorism—are more likely to seek UAVs, drone proliferation is not simply a function of the threat environment. We find evidence that democracies and autocracies are more likely than mixed regimes to develop armed UAV programs, and suggest that autocracies and democracies have their own unique incentives to acquire this technology. Moreover, supply-side factors play a role in the UAV proliferation process: a state's technological capacity is a strong predictor of whether it will obtain the most sophisticated UAVs. The theories and evidence we present challenge emerging views about UAV proliferation and shed useful light on how and why drones spread.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Law,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference52 articles.

1. Choosing Your Neighbors: Networks of Diffusion in International Relations1

2. Tekle Tesfa-Alem . 2013. Ethiopia Produces First Military Drone Aircraft. Sudan Tribune, 14 February. Available at .

3. Lockheed Martin . 2015. U-2 Specifications. http://www.lockheedmartin.com/us/products/u2/u-2-specifications.html.

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