Abstract

We live in an increasingly drone-saturated world. In this article, we bring drone scholarship and feminist geopolitics into dialogue to interrogate the drone-home. We re-orient military- and state-led accounts, foregrounding the growing range of non-state actors enacting and subject to the drone as it is increasingly employed in the Global North. In so doing, we develop the concept of ‘everyday droning’ as the honing and homing of military technology and drone capitalism. Examining militarization and enclosure at the scale of everyday home life, we urge future geographical work to engage with everyday droning being actively seeded in the domestic here-and-now.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)156-178
Number of pages23
JournalProgress in Human Geography
Volume46
Issue number1
Early online date7 Jun 2021
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 7 Jun 2021

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