This book examines public perceptions of the legitimacy of drones, and how this affects countriesâ policies on and the global governance of drone warfare.
Scholars recognize that legitimacy is central to countriesâ use of drones, and political officials often characterize strikes as legitimate to sustain their use abroad. This book introduces and tests an original middle-range theory that allows scholars, policy-makers, and practitioners to understand how evolving patterns of drone warfare globally shape the publicâs perceptions of legitimacy that can moderate countriesâ drone policies and the global governance of drones. Rather than relate drone warfare to a platform or counterterrorism strikes only, as experts often do, this book argues that drone warfare is best understood as a function of the unique ways that countries use and constrain strikes. By updating theories of drone warfare, this book provides a generalizable way to understand public perceptions of legitimacy in cross-national contexts, especially among democratic political regimes that are prefigured on political officialsâ accountability for the use of force abroad.
This book will be of interest to students of security studies, foreign policy, media and communication studies, and International Relations.
The Legitimacy of Drone Warfare - Paul Lushenko & Shyam Raman
This book examines public perceptions of the legitimacy of drones, and how this affects countriesâ policies on and the global governance of drone warfare.
Scholars recognize that legitimacy is central to countriesâ use of drones, and political officials often characterize strikes as legitimate to sustain their use abroad. This book introduces and tests an original middle-range theory that allows scholars, policy-makers, and practitioners to understand how evolving patterns of drone warfare globally shape the publicâs perceptions of legitimacy that can moderate countriesâ drone policies and the global governance of drones. Rather than relate drone warfare to a platform or counterterrorism strikes only, as experts often do, this book argues that drone warfare is best understood as a function of the unique ways that countries use and constrain strikes. By updating theories of drone warfare, this book provides a generalizable way to understand public perceptions of legitimacy in cross-national contexts, especially among democratic political regimes that are prefigured on political officialsâ accountability for the use of force abroad.
This book will be of interest to students of security studies, foreign policy, media and communication studies, and International Relations.