Visibility and Politics: an Arendtian Reading of the US Drone Policy

Autores

  • Sarah da Mota PhD in International Relations by the University of Coimbra, with a thesis entitled “NATO: upholding civilisation, protecting individuals: the unconscious dimension of international security”. Her research interests are set within critical security studies, political philosophy, international relations theory and space exploration.
  • André Barrinha Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at Canterbury Christ Church University (UK), and a Researcher at the Centre for Social Studies in Coimbra (Portugal). His work focuses on the intersection between international political theory and security studies, with a particular focus on European security.

Resumo

This article analyses the critical connections between drones as lethal technological devices, visibility, and the very possibility of politics. Drawing on Hannah Arendt’s core postulates on politics, modern security and society, it problematises the political implications of using drones as a prominent security instrument in contemporary life. This reading is unpacked through the concept of visibility as a critical reference to analyse how security policies are dealt with politically. It suggests that drones have operated as an instrument of double invisibility, both to those living in the contexts where they are employed, and to those under whose name they are being used. The consequences of this invisibility for political life and the practice of security are also discussed in the light of the policy under the Obama administration.

Downloads

Publicado

2024-10-02

Edição

Secção

Artigos