29 Nov Fourth Generation Warfare and Feral Cities
I just came across (a little late I’m afraid) this notice for a program that the Complex Terrain Lab had in London called “BattleSpaces: Feral Cities and the Scientific Way of Warfare.” The speakers were Geoff Manaugh of the excellent BLDGBLOG (he has a post on the event here) and Antoine Bousquet, lecturer on international relations at Birkbek College. The even description is intriguing:
Contemporary political discourse on armed violence and insecurity has been largely shaped by references to spatial knowledge, simulation, and control: “human terrain”, “urban clutter”, “terrorist sanctuaries”, “failed states”, “core-periphery”. The historical counterpoint to this is to be found in the key role the successive technologies of clock, engine, computer, and network have all played in spatializing the practice of warfare. In this context, what implications do “feral” Third World cities, “rogue” cities organized along non-Western ideas of urban space and infrastructure, and “wild” cities reclaimed by nature, have for the battlespaces of today and tomorrow?
Sounds like a combination of fourth generation warfare and urban studies. Hopefully, CTLab and BLDGBLOG will have further posts on this topic…
Chris, you anticipated CTLab! Indeed, there will be a special online discussion at CTLab on Antoine Bousquet’s book, between Friday, December 5 and Monday, December 8 – I’ll be participating as a guest blogger, along with a number of other people. I’ll put something up as a separate post and link to this – you’re right, having now read most of Bousquet’s book, it should be a very interesting discussion. Especially in light of the India attacks this week.
Chris, indeed you will hear more, and Ken, yes, you’ve both anticipated more! I’ve been in London all week and away from the CTlab blog, so haven’t yet posted a notice. The Feral Cities and SWOW talk was excellent, crossing boundaries of all sorts by bringing together academe and the blogosphere in a real world event, and putting together an architectural thinker with an IR specialist. The event was A/V captured, and streaming video will be available within the week. And, as Ken pointed out, we’re hosting a symposium on SWOW from 5-8. Chris, if you’re interested in participating in the symposium, drop me a line.
Mike
Michael A. Innes, Director
The Complex Terrain Laboratory