eBook (pdf) Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism - Libcom
A "Psychogeographical look at the ever increasing encroachment of militarism and high tech surveillance into urban areas." "Cities Under Siege comprises three broad, thematic chapters, followed by seven extended case studies. The first of the thematic chapters looks at how warfare, political violence and military and security imaginaries are now re-entering cities. This development follows a long period when Western military thought was preoccupied with planning globe-straddling nuclear exchanges between superpowers or massed tank engagements across rural plains. It examines, too, the ways in which the latest military and security doctrine is working to colonize the everyday environments of modern conurbations. Chapter 2 moves on to look at how the various bastions of the political right increasingly work to demonize cities as intrinsically threatening or problematic places necessitating political violence, militarized control, or radical securitization. In Chapter 3, I detail the particular characteristics of the new military urbanism, and use some of the latest research in the social sciences to highlight key features of the deep ening crossover between urbanism and militarism. The next six case studies address the circuits through which the new military urbanism connects urban life in the West to existence on colonial frontiers. The first three look at, respectively, the proliferation of borders and surveillance systems within the fabric of urban life; the US military's ambitions for urban and counterinsurgency warfare based on the deployment of armed robots; and the connections between entertainment, simulation and US military and imperial violence. The final three explore the diffusion of Israeli technology and doctrine in urban warfare and securitization; the links between urban infrastructure and contemporary political violence; and the ways in which Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) culture is embedded within a geopolitical and political- economic setting that links domestic and colonial cities and spaces. https://libcom.org/library/cities-under-siege-new-urban-militarism-stephen-g... Direct link, PDF, 7.3Mb: https://libcom.org/files/Graham,%20Stephen%20-%20Cities%20Under%20Siege.%20T...
Thanks, looking forward to reading this. "My kind of fun," as they say. :o) On 03/04/2017 11:46 PM, Razer wrote:
A "Psychogeographical look at the ever increasing encroachment of militarism and high tech surveillance into urban areas."
"Cities Under Siege comprises three broad, thematic chapters, followed by seven extended case studies.
The first of the thematic chapters looks at how warfare, political violence and military and security imaginaries are now re-entering cities. This development follows a long period when Western military thought was preoccupied with planning globe-straddling nuclear exchanges between superpowers or massed tank engagements across rural plains. It examines, too, the ways in which the latest military and security doctrine is working to colonize the everyday environments of modern conurbations.
Chapter 2 moves on to look at how the various bastions of the political right increasingly work to demonize cities as intrinsically threatening or problematic places necessitating political violence, militarized control, or radical securitization.
In Chapter 3, I detail the particular characteristics of the new military urbanism, and use some of the latest research in the social sciences to highlight key features of the deep ening crossover between urbanism and militarism.
The next six case studies address the circuits through which the new military urbanism connects urban life in the West to existence on colonial frontiers. The first three look at, respectively, the proliferation of borders and surveillance systems within the fabric of urban life; the US military's ambitions for urban and counterinsurgency warfare based on the deployment of armed robots; and the connections between entertainment, simulation and US military and imperial violence.
The final three explore the diffusion of Israeli technology and doctrine in urban warfare and securitization; the links between urban infrastructure and contemporary political violence; and the ways in which Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) culture is embedded within a geopolitical and political- economic setting that links domestic and colonial cities and spaces.
https://libcom.org/library/cities-under-siege-new-urban-militarism-stephen-g...
Direct link, PDF, 7.3Mb: https://libcom.org/files/Graham,%20Stephen%20-%20Cities%20Under%20Siege.%20T...
participants (2)
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Razer
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Steve Kinney