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Killing from Afar. Beyond the Frontlines, #1

Par : Jake Hollister
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8232842512
  • EAN9798232842512
  • Date de parution27/09/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurHamza elmir

Résumé

Drone warfare is changing the way we understand combat, empathy, and responsibility, as remote killings create psychological and moral distances between the operator and the human cost of war. In this groundbreaking exploration, Killing from Afar: The Psychology of Drone Warfare delves into the profound effects of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) strikes on soldiers, civilians, and society at large. With precision strike technology becoming a central feature of 21st-century conflict, operators are navigating unprecedented ethical dilemmas while managing the psychological toll of witnessing life and death through screens rather than face-to-face engagement.
Drawing on military psychology, case studies, and ethical theory, this book examines how distance and digital interfaces transform perceptions of violence, leading to emotional numbing, moral disengagement, and a detachment that challenges traditional concepts of responsibility. Readers will discover how civilian casualties, often sanitized in media and government reports, leave invisible scars that ripple across generations, reshaping communities under constant surveillance and threat.
Killing from Afar goes beyond statistics and strategy, providing a human-centered perspective on the complex realities of remote warfare. It highlights the emotional burdens carried by drone operators-the isolation, stress, and trauma of managing death at a distance-and considers how societies normalize violence when physical presence is removed from the equation. This book also confronts the growing role of autonomous weapons, AI-assisted strikes, and the ethical challenges they pose, offering insight into the consequences of delegating lethal decision-making to machines.
Through vivid narratives and psychological analysis, the book investigates the erosion of empathy and the dehumanization inherent in remote combat, showing how technological advancement can amplify the disconnection between action and consequence. It raises urgent questions about moral responsibility in modern conflicts, the ethics of precision warfare, and the global proliferation of drone programs that reshape both international relations and the human experience of war.
Ideal for military professionals, ethicists, psychologists, policymakers, and engaged citizens, Killing from Afar provides an unflinching look at the intersection of technology, human behavior, and morality. By examining the psychological impact on operators, the human cost for civilians, and the broader societal implications, this book challenges readers to reconsider what it means to wage war in an age where killing is no longer immediate, visible, or personal.
With search-engine optimized language-covering drone warfare, remote killing, military psychology, empathy, civilian casualties, moral disengagement, and the ethics of war-this work is designed to be visible to scholars, journalists, and readers seeking a deep understanding of the evolving face of modern conflict. It is a compelling, human-centered investigation that illuminates the hidden consequences of a war fought from afar and calls for reflection on the future of responsibility, humanity, and conscience in an increasingly digital battlefield.
Drone warfare is changing the way we understand combat, empathy, and responsibility, as remote killings create psychological and moral distances between the operator and the human cost of war. In this groundbreaking exploration, Killing from Afar: The Psychology of Drone Warfare delves into the profound effects of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) strikes on soldiers, civilians, and society at large. With precision strike technology becoming a central feature of 21st-century conflict, operators are navigating unprecedented ethical dilemmas while managing the psychological toll of witnessing life and death through screens rather than face-to-face engagement.
Drawing on military psychology, case studies, and ethical theory, this book examines how distance and digital interfaces transform perceptions of violence, leading to emotional numbing, moral disengagement, and a detachment that challenges traditional concepts of responsibility. Readers will discover how civilian casualties, often sanitized in media and government reports, leave invisible scars that ripple across generations, reshaping communities under constant surveillance and threat.
Killing from Afar goes beyond statistics and strategy, providing a human-centered perspective on the complex realities of remote warfare. It highlights the emotional burdens carried by drone operators-the isolation, stress, and trauma of managing death at a distance-and considers how societies normalize violence when physical presence is removed from the equation. This book also confronts the growing role of autonomous weapons, AI-assisted strikes, and the ethical challenges they pose, offering insight into the consequences of delegating lethal decision-making to machines.
Through vivid narratives and psychological analysis, the book investigates the erosion of empathy and the dehumanization inherent in remote combat, showing how technological advancement can amplify the disconnection between action and consequence. It raises urgent questions about moral responsibility in modern conflicts, the ethics of precision warfare, and the global proliferation of drone programs that reshape both international relations and the human experience of war.
Ideal for military professionals, ethicists, psychologists, policymakers, and engaged citizens, Killing from Afar provides an unflinching look at the intersection of technology, human behavior, and morality. By examining the psychological impact on operators, the human cost for civilians, and the broader societal implications, this book challenges readers to reconsider what it means to wage war in an age where killing is no longer immediate, visible, or personal.
With search-engine optimized language-covering drone warfare, remote killing, military psychology, empathy, civilian casualties, moral disengagement, and the ethics of war-this work is designed to be visible to scholars, journalists, and readers seeking a deep understanding of the evolving face of modern conflict. It is a compelling, human-centered investigation that illuminates the hidden consequences of a war fought from afar and calls for reflection on the future of responsibility, humanity, and conscience in an increasingly digital battlefield.
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