The bureaucratization of war: moral challenges exemplified by the covert lethal drone
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Adams, Richard
Barrie, Chris
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Co-Action Publishing
Abstract
This article interrogates the bureaucratization of war, incarnate in the covert lethal drone.
Bureaucracies are criticized typically for their complexity, inefficiency, and inflexibility. This article
is concerned with their moral indifference. It explores killing, which is so highly administered,
so morally remote, and of such scale, that we acknowledge a covert lethal program. This is a
bureaucratized program of assassination in contravention of critical human rights. In this article, this
program is seen to compromise the advance of global justice. Moreover, the bureaucratization of
lethal force is seen to dissolve democratic ideals from within. The bureaucracy isolates the citizens
from lethal force applied in their name. People are killed, in the name of the State, but without
conspicuous justification, or judicial review, and without informed public debate. This article gives
an account of the risk associated with the bureaucratization of the State’s lethal power. Exemplified
by the covert drone, this is power with formidable reach. It is power as well, which requires great
moral sensitivity. Considering the drone program, this article identifies challenges, which will
become more prominent and pressing, as technology advances.
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Ethics & Global Politics
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Open Access
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