1st Edition

Technology and Agency in International Relations

Edited By Marijn Hoijtink, Matthias Leese Copyright 2019
224 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

222 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

222 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book responds to a gap in the literature in International Relations (IR) by integrating technology more systematically into analyses of global politics. Technology facilitates, accelerates, automates, and exercises capabilities that are greater than human abilities. And yet, within IR, the role of technology often remains under-studied. Building on insights from science and technology... Read more

Chapter 1 – How (not) to talk about technology: International Relations and the question of agency

Matthias Leese & Marijn Hoijtink

Chapter 2 – Co-production: The study of productive processes at the level of materiality and discourse

Katja Lindskov Jacobsen & Linda Monsees

Chapter 3 – Configuring warfare: Automation, control, agency

Matthias Leese

Chapter 4 – Security and technology: Unraveling the politics in satellite imagery of North Korea

Philipp Olbrich

Chapter 5 – Vision, visuality and agency in the US drone program

Alex Edney-Browne

Chapter 6 – What does technology do? Blockchains, co-Production, and extensions of liberal market governance in Anglo-American finance

Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn

Chapter 7 – Who connects the dots? Agents and agency in predictive policing

Mareile Kaufmann

Chapter 8 – Designing digital borders: The Visa Information System (VIS)

Georgios Glouftsios

Chapter 9 – Technology, agency, critique: An interview with Claudia Aradau

Claudia Aradau, Marijn Hoijtink & Matthias Leese

Biography

Marijn Hoijtink is an Assistant Professor in International Relations at VU Amsterdam. Her research interests include emerging security technologies and their relation to the politics of risk, militarism and weapons research, and the global circulation of security and military technologies. She has recently received a 4-years Veni grant from The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) to study the politics of engineering lethal autonomous weapons systems.





Matthias Leese is a Senior Researcher at the Center for Security Studies (CSS), ETH Zurich. His research is primarily interested in the social effects produced at the intersection between security and technology, and pays specific attention to the normative repercussions of new security technologies across society, both in intended and unintended forms. His work covers various application contexts of security technologies, including airports, borders, policing, and R&D activities.