Forum: Militarization 2.0: Communication and the Normalization of Political Violence in the Digital Age

Author:

Jackson Susan T1ORCID,Crilley Rhys2ORCID,Manor Ilan3,Baker Catherine4ORCID,Oshikoya Modupe5,Joachim Jutta6,Robinson Nick7ORCID,Schneiker Andrea8ORCID,Grove Nicole Sunday9,Enloe Cynthia10

Affiliation:

1. Stockholm University

2. University of Glasgow

3. University of Oxford

4. University of Hull

5. Virginia Wesleyan University

6. Radboud University

7. University of Leeds

8. University of Siegen

9. University of Hawai'i at Manoa

10. Clark University

Abstract

Abstract Scholars of international relations frequently explore how states normalize the use of military force through processes of militarization, yet few have analyzed how new information and communication technologies impact on these processes. The essays in this forum address this gap, and consider the political significance of new technologies, new actors, and new practices that shape “Militarization 2.0” and normalize political violence in the digital age. The authors in this forum rely, to varying degrees, on common militarized tropes and dichotomies (such as authenticity, belonging, and (de)humanizing framings) that are key to militarization, including those devices that rest on gender, race/ethnicity, and heteronormativity. Moving beyond a military-centered approach to militarization, the authors’ questions cover ministries of foreign affairs; the embodied performances of celebrity leaders and insurgency groups; arms producers, the military video game industry, and private military and security companies; and violence entrepreneurs. The forum closes with reflections from Cynthia Enloe.

Funder

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference110 articles.

1. Return of the Generals? Global Militarism in Africa from the Cold War to the Present;Abrahamsen;Security Dialogue,2018

2. The Political Economy of Militarization in Nigeria;Agbese;Africa Spectrum,1990

3. The Dance of Militarisation: A Feminist Security Studies Take on ‘the Political’;Åhäll;Critical Studies on Security,2016

4. Gender;Åhäll,2018

5. The Cloud, the Crowd, and the City: How New Data Practices Reconfigure Urban Governance?;Ashton;Big Data & Society,2017

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