Abstract
This paper makes a case for understanding air power through the lens of police. After first rethinking a key period in the history of air power (colonial bombing campaigns) as a police mechanism, the paper then moves to consider the impoverished conception of war and police in contemporary critical theory. The final section turns to perhaps the most pressing issue in current air power debates, namely drones, and suggests that a consideration of air power as police power helps us read drones as a continuation of the police logic inherent in air power since its inception. © 2013 Pion and its Licensors.
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CITATION STYLE
Neocleous, M. (2013). Air power as police power. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 31(4), 578–593. https://doi.org/10.1068/d19212
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