🎈 New piece out in @millennjournal!
I look at how imagined futures of “emergent and disruptive tech” loop back to shape present-day politics of war — and how the history of military ballooning (1783–1907) helps us see this recursive logic in action.
https://t.co/FnIQsyfYcQ
Why look to the past rather than the future when analysing military tech? Focusing on military ballooning, @FredWindfeld's article shows why foregrounding technologies’ antecedents — not imagined futures — helps us rethink disruptive tech debates.
👇
https://t.co/zzM9oXC7b2
🎉I am very pleased to share the publication of our @millennjournal Vol. 53 Special Issue: Traversing Memories in Global Politics.
You can read our Introduction, co-authored with @kinti_orellana and @paulinezerla , here: https://t.co/uUqccTY39x
🎈 New piece out in @millennjournal!
I look at how imagined futures of “emergent and disruptive tech” loop back to shape present-day politics of war — and how the history of military ballooning (1783–1907) helps us see this recursive logic in action.
https://t.co/FnIQsyfYcQ
🚨 New article
In it, @FredWindfeld shows that the contention over defining Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (LAWS) is not reducible to country positions alone; it also has its roots in epistemic contests over what constitutes superior knowledge.
https://t.co/AYKhIixntx
🚨 Article out in @CSP_journal!
I explore how legal, technical & military expertise condition the prospects for defining/regulating lethal autonomous weapons systems—and how struggles over epistemic capital produce political effects in global governance
https://t.co/t3iGzMTvQ6
🌟 Fully funded PhD in European Studies! 🌟
Join us at Lund University to explore digital politics, digital diplomacy, digital disinformation & more.
✅ Master’s in humanities/social sciences required
⏳ Deadline: Jan 20th
📚 Apply: https://t.co/9OEq8rR7Dc
#PhD#AcademicTwitter
I am beyond happy to see my first solo-authored article out in Qualitative Research. In it, I confront multi-sited research with the concept of "chokepoints"—places where flows of goods, people, or information are slowed down, disrupted, or torn apart. https://t.co/8AF5BCEhjA
📝 'See, Touch, Feel: Theorizing Twitter/X Images for Diplomacy', new article by @c_duncombe, looks at the visual politics of digital diplomacy. Read more below ⤵️ https://t.co/N0yKmHbXmB
⏳We’re looking forward to welcoming our guest scholars and participants to the annual Millennium Symposium beginning this Thursday at LSE! This year’s theme is ‘Traversing Memories in Global Politics.’
#MillenniumSymposium24
[PH.D] Are you interested in doing a Ph.D in Political or Social Science?
Then participate in this online event, that describes the @EUI_EU doctoral program offerings https://t.co/17MtJ7jkiB
Here’s more info on how to apply to the doctoral programme in Political and Social Sciences https://t.co/EmOiv4IKzG
In a book I wrote 5 years ago, “a different mode of critique & ethical account is animated not by the q ‘how ought the algorithm be arranged for a good society?’ But by the q ‘how are algorithms generating ideas of goodness, transgression, & what society ought to be” 1/n
Three fully-funded PhD positions are available to join the new ERC Advanced Grant ‘Deep Culture - Living with Difference in the Age of Deep Learning’ in Amsterdam. For further details and a link to apply, please visit: https://t.co/TR7qe9OrHY