ID | 150566 |
Title Proper | Insurgency of things |
Other Title Information | Foray into the world of Improvised Explosive Device |
Language | ENG |
Author | Grove, Jairus |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | IED attacks in Afghanistan went from 797 attacks in 2006 to 15,222 attacks in 2012. In that time, 53,997 IEDs and their human collaborators injured more than 11,416 US soldiers and killed over 1,298 soldiers in Afghanistan. If you include Iraq, IEDs account for almost two-thirds of all US soldiers wounded and killed in both wars. This article investigates why something as low-tech as an improvised bomb is so significant to contemporary warfare. The article contends that, contrary to the effort to “beat” the IED by the US Department of Defense, the IED is not a thing. The IED, I argue, is a condition of possibility present in almost all of contemporary life. IEDs are native inhabitants of a world of global relations and things that hover on the edge between tool and weapon. |
`In' analytical Note | International Political Sociology Vol.10, No.4; Dec 2016: p.332-351 |
Journal Source | International Political Sociology 2016-12 10, 4 |
Key Words | Insurgency ; Afghanistan ; Improvised Explosive Devices ; IED Attacks |