[csaa-forum] Inventing Collateral Damage International Workshop, 21-22 November 2017

Institute for Culture and Society ICS at WesternSydney.edu.au
Wed Nov 15 12:13:18 ACST 2017


You are invited to attend the 'Inventing Collateral Damage' International Workshop, hosted by the School of Humanities and Communication Arts at Western Sydney University.

Workshop Details
Date: 21-22 November, 2017
Venue: Geoffrey Roberson Boardroom, Female Orphan School (Building EZ), Western Sydney University Parramatta South Campus
RSVP: By 15 November to Dr Jessica Whyte (j.whyte at westernsydney.edu.au<mailto:j.whyte at westernsydney.edu.au>)

This workshop is held under the auspices of Dr Jessica Whyte's Australian Research Council DECRA Project 'The Invention of Collateral Damage and the Changing Moral Economy of War' (DE160100473).

About the Workshop
This workshop aims to illuminate the invention of 'collateral damage'. In the paradigmatic U.S. military definition, collateral damage refers to 'unintentional or incidental damage to persons or objects that would not be lawful military targets in the circumstances ruling at the time'. Such damage need not be the accidental consequence of technical malfunction or human error, but also encompasses harm that is both foreseeable and foreseen by militaries that nonetheless proclaim their compliance with international law prohibitions on intentionally targeting noncombatants. Today, there is a significant body of scholarship that addresses the history of the laws of war and the construction of categories such as the civilian and the combatant. Less attention has been devoted to the language of 'collateral damage' as a distinctive rationalization of death and destruction, or to the political stakes of this language.

What a prominent US human rights center terms 'collateral damage management' is currently a burgeoning field that involves militaries, humanitarian organizations and international lawyers in the attempt to 'humanize' war by reducing its impact on civilians. Western militaries devote significant resources to estimating the precise number of civilian deaths likely to result from any particular attack, and utilize sophisticated computer programs to guide them in minimizing casualties and ensuring compliance with international humanitarian law. This incorporation of humanitarian logics into military strategy is double-edged; while it offers the possibility of constraining military violence, it also risks becoming a means by which further violence is rationalized. The language of collateral damage, as Talal Asad notes, enables Western militaries to justify the killing of non-combatants, while morally elevating their own 'civilized' violence over the violence of those who resist military attack and occupation.

Today, the term 'collateral damage' has become part of our contemporary lexicon, and its semantic field has extended beyond the military context to refer to diverse forms of "unintended" harm. This workshop will bring together political theorists, philosophers, legal scholars and historians to examine the historical and institutional processes that have established a crucial moral and legal distinction between intentional harm inflicted on noncombatants, and the 'collateral damage' that is seen as an inevitable 'side effect' of modern warfare.

Keynote Speakers
Associate Professor Banu Bargu, The New School, NYC and Professor Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College, Washington

More information, including the Workshop Program, is available here: https://www.westernsydney.edu.au/ics/events/ics_events_slideshow/inventing_collateral_damage_workshop

All the best,
Helen

Helen Barcham | Partnerships & Business Development Officer (Tue - Fri)
Institute for Culture and Society
P: 9685 9692 | M: 0431 330 876
Hours: 9.30am - 5pm
www.westernsydney.edu.au/ics/people/professional_staff/partnerships_officer
[KCE2017-email-signature]<http://knowledgeculture.org/>

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