‘There’s always a [white] man in the loop’: The gendered and racialized politics of civilian drones

Author:

Olson Philip1,Labuski Christine2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Science, Technology, and Society, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, USA

2. Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, USA

Abstract

In 2014, the United States Federal Aviation Administration chose six sites at which to conduct research crucial to integrating unmanned aircraft systems into the nation’s airspace. Analyzing data collected from five focus groups that we conducted at one of these test sites, this article centers on the gendered and racialized politics of civilian unmanned aircraft. Civilian drone use remains a relatively unchallenged space for displaying hypermasculinity via technological expertise. Focusing on the topic of surveillance, we argue that a very particular, intersectional perspective – white technomasculinity – profoundly influences how civilian unmanned aircraft are imagined, designed and deployed. While this perspective went unmarked and was taken for granted by most of our focus group participants, our analysis highlights the constructed and contingent nature of white technomasculinity, and we argue that a critical technological consciousness is necessary to prevent these technologies from reinforcing or exacerbating unequal distributions of rights and responsibilities among differently located social actors. We conclude our paper on a cautiously hopeful note, drawing attention to moments in which more distributed, or ‘sousveillant’, uses of civilian UAS appeared possible.

Funder

Institute for Critical Technology and Applied Sciences (ICTAS), Virginia Tech

Institute for Society, Culture and Environment (ISCE), Virginia Tech

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,History

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