On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence

This dissertation investigates the most recent cycle of North Atlantic expeditionary warfare by addressing the resuscitation of counterinsurgency warfare with a specific focus on the war in Afghanistan from 2006 to 2014. The project interrogates the lasting aesthetic, epistemological, philosophical,...

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Main Author: Balan, Neil
Other Authors: Berland, Jody
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10315/32217
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spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/32217 2023-05-15T17:32:05+02:00 On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence Balan, Neil Berland, Jody 2016-09-20T16:46:02Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10315/32217 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10315/32217 Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. Philosophy Counterinsurgency Biopower Biopolitics Michel Foucault Military violence Collateralization Liberal war Late modern warfare Warfare Military affairs Global civil war Military doctrine Security Population Precision counterinsurgency Poststructural theory Afghanistan Village stability operations Systemic operational design NATO ISAF Neoliberalism Military neoliberalism Military environmentalism Semiotics Discourse analysis Media Communications Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2016 ftyorkuniv 2022-08-22T13:05:25Z This dissertation investigates the most recent cycle of North Atlantic expeditionary warfare by addressing the resuscitation of counterinsurgency warfare with a specific focus on the war in Afghanistan from 2006 to 2014. The project interrogates the lasting aesthetic, epistemological, philosophical, and territorial implications of counterinsurgency, which should be understood as part of wider transformations in military affairs in relation to discourses of adaptation, complexity, and systemic design, and to the repertoire of global contingency and stability operations. Afghanistan served as a counterinsurgency laboratory, and the experiments will shape the conduct of future wars, domestic security practices, and the increasingly indistinct boundary between them. Using work from Michel Foucault and liberal war studies, the project undertakes a genealogy of contemporary population-centred counterinsurgency and interrogates how its conduct is constituted by and as a mixture firepower and biopower. Insofar as this mix employs force with different speeds, doses, and intensities, the dissertation argues that counterinsurgency unrestricts and collateralizes violence, which is emblematic of liberal war that kills selectively to secure and make life live in ways amenable to local and global imperatives of liberal rule. Contemporary military counterinsurgents, in conducting operations on the edges of liberal rule's jurisdiction and in recursively influencing the domestic spaces of North Atlantic states, fashion biopoweras custodial power to conduct the conduct of lifeto shape different interventions into the everyday lives of target populations. The 'lesser evil' logic of counterinsurgency is used to frame counterinsurgency as a type of warfare that is comparatively low-intensity and less harmful, and this justification actually lowers the threshold for violence by making increasingly indiscriminate the ways in which its employment damages and envelops populations and communities, thereby allowing counterinsurgents to ... Thesis North Atlantic York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
topic Philosophy
Counterinsurgency
Biopower
Biopolitics
Michel Foucault
Military violence
Collateralization
Liberal war
Late modern warfare
Warfare
Military affairs
Global civil war
Military doctrine
Security
Population
Precision counterinsurgency
Poststructural theory
Afghanistan
Village stability operations
Systemic operational design
NATO ISAF
Neoliberalism
Military neoliberalism
Military environmentalism
Semiotics
Discourse analysis
Media
Communications
spellingShingle Philosophy
Counterinsurgency
Biopower
Biopolitics
Michel Foucault
Military violence
Collateralization
Liberal war
Late modern warfare
Warfare
Military affairs
Global civil war
Military doctrine
Security
Population
Precision counterinsurgency
Poststructural theory
Afghanistan
Village stability operations
Systemic operational design
NATO ISAF
Neoliberalism
Military neoliberalism
Military environmentalism
Semiotics
Discourse analysis
Media
Communications
Balan, Neil
On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence
topic_facet Philosophy
Counterinsurgency
Biopower
Biopolitics
Michel Foucault
Military violence
Collateralization
Liberal war
Late modern warfare
Warfare
Military affairs
Global civil war
Military doctrine
Security
Population
Precision counterinsurgency
Poststructural theory
Afghanistan
Village stability operations
Systemic operational design
NATO ISAF
Neoliberalism
Military neoliberalism
Military environmentalism
Semiotics
Discourse analysis
Media
Communications
description This dissertation investigates the most recent cycle of North Atlantic expeditionary warfare by addressing the resuscitation of counterinsurgency warfare with a specific focus on the war in Afghanistan from 2006 to 2014. The project interrogates the lasting aesthetic, epistemological, philosophical, and territorial implications of counterinsurgency, which should be understood as part of wider transformations in military affairs in relation to discourses of adaptation, complexity, and systemic design, and to the repertoire of global contingency and stability operations. Afghanistan served as a counterinsurgency laboratory, and the experiments will shape the conduct of future wars, domestic security practices, and the increasingly indistinct boundary between them. Using work from Michel Foucault and liberal war studies, the project undertakes a genealogy of contemporary population-centred counterinsurgency and interrogates how its conduct is constituted by and as a mixture firepower and biopower. Insofar as this mix employs force with different speeds, doses, and intensities, the dissertation argues that counterinsurgency unrestricts and collateralizes violence, which is emblematic of liberal war that kills selectively to secure and make life live in ways amenable to local and global imperatives of liberal rule. Contemporary military counterinsurgents, in conducting operations on the edges of liberal rule's jurisdiction and in recursively influencing the domestic spaces of North Atlantic states, fashion biopoweras custodial power to conduct the conduct of lifeto shape different interventions into the everyday lives of target populations. The 'lesser evil' logic of counterinsurgency is used to frame counterinsurgency as a type of warfare that is comparatively low-intensity and less harmful, and this justification actually lowers the threshold for violence by making increasingly indiscriminate the ways in which its employment damages and envelops populations and communities, thereby allowing counterinsurgents to ...
author2 Berland, Jody
format Thesis
author Balan, Neil
author_facet Balan, Neil
author_sort Balan, Neil
title On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence
title_short On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence
title_full On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence
title_fullStr On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence
title_full_unstemmed On Counterinsurgency: Firepower, Biopower, and the Collateralization of Milliatry Violence
title_sort on counterinsurgency: firepower, biopower, and the collateralization of milliatry violence
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10315/32217
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10315/32217
op_rights Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
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