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The Contested Landscape Of Jerusalem

The Review

John Matthew Barlow discusses University of Tel Aviv archeologist Raphael Greenberg's new research on the dig at Wadi Hilweh, and its political and cultural ramifications for Israelis and Palestinians.

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  • Contested Jerusalem

    Research

    John Matthew Barlow discusses University of Tel Aviv archeologist Raphael Greenberg's new research on the dig at Wadi Hilweh, and its political and cultural ramifications for Israelis and Palestinians.

    Read more...

  • The Occidental Guerrilla

    Book Review

    Michael A. Innes reviews David Kilcullen's new book The Accidental Guerrilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One. A timely and astute synthesis of experience, research and analysis, the author pinpoints the political shear between minority existential threats to US interests and the majority of the world's locally invested guerrillas who just want to be left alone.

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  • Architecture & Biopolitics

    Interview

    Berlin-based writer Daniel Miller's October 2008 interview with Swedish philosopher and SITE Magazine Editor-In-Chief Sven-Olov Wallenstein, on his new book Biopolitics and the Emergence of Modern Architecture (Princeton Architectural Press, 2009).

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  • Wired For War

    Symposium

    The second symposium in CTlab's 2009 series, focused on Peter Singer's new book, Wired For War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the 21st Century (Penguin Press: 2009), ran from 30 March to 2 April. Singer and half a dozen scholars from the U.S., Canada, the U.K., and Austria debated the use and ethics of robots in war.

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  • The Limits Of "Security"

    Current Intelligence

    Kenneth Anderson explores the link between international financial instability and global security in response to Judy Shelton's recent Wall Street Journal op-ed.

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Sunday
30Nov

Booklab: The Scientific Way of Warfare

I'm happy to announce that CTlab will be hosting its second virtual symposium on 5-8 December, featuring Dr. Antoine Bousquet (Birkbeck College) and his new book, The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity (London: Hurst & Co. Publishers; New York: Columbia University Press, 2009). This second symposium follows the CTlab-hosted public lecture, "Feral Cities and the Scientific Way of Warfare", which saw Dr. Bousquet and Geoff Manaugh, the author of the superb BLDBLOG, discussing historical forms of battlefield management and future conflict in cities. It also continues the high standard of discussion and debate set in CTlab's first symposium, Social Sciences in War: Defending Hamdan. Dr. Bousquet will be initiating the dialogue, with notable scholars from the US, Canada, and the UK joining the conversation.

CONFIRMED PARTICIPANTS:

Kenneth Anderson – Law (American University)

Josef Ansorge – International Relations (Cambridge University)

John Matthew Barlow – History (Concordia University)

Antoine Bousquet - Politics & Sociology (Birkbeck College)

Martin Coward – International Relations (University of Sussex)

Armando Geller – Conflict Analysis (Manchester Metropolitan University)

James Gibson – Sociology (California State University, Long Beach)

Derek Gregory – Geography (University of British Columbia)

Craig Hayden –International Communications (American University)

Charles Jones –International Relations (Cambridge University)

Jason Ralph – Politics and International Studies (University of Leeds)

Julian Reid – War Studies (King’s College London)

Martin Senn – Political Science (University College London)

Marc Tyrrell – Anthropology (Carleton University)

Tony Waters – Sociology (California State University, Chico)

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