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Crash Theory: Entrapments of Conservation Drones and Endangered Megafauna
- Source :
- Science, Technology, & Human Values. 46:425-451
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- SAGE Publications, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Drones deployed to monitor endangered species often crash. These crashes teach us that using drones for conservation is a contingent practice ensnaring humans, technologies, and animals. This article advances a crash theory in which pilots, conservation drones, and endangered megafauna are relata, or related actants, that intra-act, cocreating each other and a mutually constituted phenomena. These phenomena are entangled, with either reciprocal dependencies or erosive entrapments. The crashing of conservation drones and endangered species requires an ethics of care, repair, or reworlding. Diffractions, disruptions that expose difference, result from crashes and reveal the precarious manner by which technologies, laws, and discourses bring nature and culture together. To support crash theory, this article presents three ethnographic cases. A drone crash in the United Kingdom near white rhinoceroses while building machine learning training data exhibits the involvement of the electromagnetic spectrum; the threat of crashes in the Pacific Northwest near Puget Sound orcas discloses the impacts of drone laws; and drone crashes in Sri Lanka among Asian elephants presents the problems of technoliberal ideals around programming natural worlds. Throughout the article, a methodology is developed, parallelism, which attends to the material similarities in lateral phenomena.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Economics and Econometrics
Sociology and Political Science
05 social sciences
0507 social and economic geography
Endangered species
Crash
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Drone
Human-Computer Interaction
Fishery
Philosophy
Geography
Anthropology
Megafauna
050703 geography
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15528251 and 01622439
- Volume :
- 46
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Science, Technology, & Human Values
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........9a12ce60c12418a7888ac306a04280fb