现代晚期战争和地理:先进军事技术的生态“前数学”。

IF 2.8 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Security Dialogue Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-18 DOI:10.1177/09670106241265636
Mark Griffiths, Kali Rubaii
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章发展了这样一种观点,即现代晚期战争与地理(地面及其维持的生命)的关系具有双重破坏性。虽然最近对缓慢暴力和生态后果的关注部分认识到了这一点,但很少考虑“前数学”,或使先进军事技术成为可能的提取地点。文章将军事技术与武器制造商及其对提取矿物(如钴、钽、铜、铀)的使用联系起来,提请人们注意刚果民主共和国(DRC)的采矿业。在伊拉克、加沙和刚果民主共和国部分地区,环境和公共卫生影响的共同模式表明,现代晚期战争与地质环境的关系具有双重破坏性:有毒物质在战争后作为轰炸的沉积物威胁生命,而在战争前作为武器供应链起点的矿产商品威胁生命。这篇文章阐述了前数学的观点是如何从根本上重新塑造了我们对战争、空间性、时间性和受影响的身体范围的看法,从而使我们对现代战争后期的暴力行为有了更全面的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Late modern war and the geos: The ecological 'beforemaths' of advanced military technologies.

This article develops the idea that late modern war's relationship with the geos (the ground and the life it sustains) is doubly destructive. While part of this is recognized in a recent focus on slow violence and ecological aftermaths, there is little consideration of the 'beforemath', or the sites of extraction that make advanced military technologies possible. Drawing attention to mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the article connects military technologies to arms manufacturers and their use of extracted minerals (e.g. cobalt, tantalum, copper, uranium). Shared patterns of environmental and public health effects across parts of Iraq, Gaza and the DRC indicate the doubly destructive nature of late modern war's relationship with the geos: toxic materials threaten life after war as the deposits of bombardment and before war as mineral commodities at the beginning of arms supply chains. The article explicates how a perspective from the beforemath radically refigures the ways we think about war and spatiality, temporality, and the range of bodies affected in ways that promise a fuller understanding of the violence distributed by practices of late modern war.

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来源期刊
Security Dialogue
Security Dialogue INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Security Dialogue is a fully peer-reviewed and highly ranked international bi-monthly journal that seeks to combine contemporary theoretical analysis with challenges to public policy across a wide ranging field of security studies. Security Dialogue seeks to revisit and recast the concept of security through new approaches and methodologies.
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