Intimacies of Remote Warfare
  • Themes
    • Politics
    • Political Economy
    • Security Cooperation
    • Technologies
    • Civilian Harm
  • Content
    • Research Publications
    • Media
    • Events
    • Projects
  • About
 
  • About

drone warfare

Civilian Harm
Article
29 February 2024
29/02/24

Death by Remote Control: Drone Warfare in Afghanistan, Ukraine and Beyond

Article
Prof. Roberto J. González explores the lived experiences of soldiers and civilians who are directly affected by the introduction of unmanned and increasingly autonomous weapon systems on the 21st century battlefield.
Civilian Harm
Article
Michael Boyle
04 May 2023
04/05/23

The costs and consequences of drone warfare

Michael Boyle
Article
Michael J. Boyle discusses and warns for the different costs and consequences of remote warfare such as blowback.
Algorithmic Warfare
Conference
Lauren Gould et al
15/02/23

RAW panel kicks off REAIM Summit

Lauren Gould et al
Conference
Re-watch the packed RE-AIM session discussing the realities of autonomous warfare via the link.
Algorithmic Warfare
Conference
Lauren Gould et al
09/05/25

Realities of Algorithmic Warfare at the REAIM Summit

Lauren Gould et al
Conference
IRW is hosting a session at the RE-AIM summit in the Hague, February 15th.
Civilian Harm
News
03 February 2022
03/02/22

The ‘Civilian Casualty Files’: How US precision airstrikes caused thousands of civilian deaths

News
In a series of New York Times publications, Azmat Khan exposes the true human toll of American airstrikes.
Politics
Op-ed
Lauren Gould, Isa Zoetbrood
28 December 2020
28/12/20

More drones, more war

Lauren Gould et al
MQ-9 Reaper
Op-ed
The notion that deploying drones will enable militaries to conduct war with greater precision and less civilian harm is neither new, nor accurate argues the IRW team in an op-ed for the Dutch newspaper the NRC.
Politics
Events
Elke Schwarz et al
09/05/25

Drone Warfare: Today, Tomorrow, Forever?

Elke Schwarz et al
Events
This webinar addresses the trends in global drone development and use, and discusses where campaigners should be focusing their efforts in the coming years.
Back to top

Intimacies of Remote Warfare


An Institutions for Open Societies Project

@2024 University of Utrecht. All rights reserved

Web design by Ripple & Riddle

Online