1.
Adey P, Whitehead M, Williams A, editors. From Above: War, Violence and Verticality. London: Hurst & Company; 2013.
2.
Adey et al P, editor. From Above: War, Violence, and Verticality [Internet]. New York: Oxford University Press; 2013. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199334797.001.0001
3.
Crampton JW. The New Political Economy of Geographical Intelligence. Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 2014;104(1):196–214.
4.
Elden S. Secure the Volume: Vertical Geopolitics and the Depth of Power. Political Geography. 2013;34:35–51.
5.
Gregory D. The Everywhere War. The Geographical JournalForeign Affairs [Internet]. 2011;177(3):238–50. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41238044
6.
Gregory D. From a View to a Kill. Theory, Culture & Society. 2011;28(7–8):188–215.
7.
Kersley E. New Ways of War: Is Remote Control Warfare Effective? the Remote Control Digest. Remote Control Project [Internet]. Available from: http://www.statewatch.org/news/2014/oct/Remote-Control-Digest.pdf
8.
Kindervater KH. Drone Strikes, Ephemeral Sovereignty, and Changing Conceptions of Territory. Territory, Politics, Governance. 2017;5(2):207–21.
9.
Parks L, Kaplan C. Life in the Age of Drone Warfare. Durham: Duke University Press; 2017.
10.
Parks L, Kaplan C, editors. Life in the Age of Drone Warfare [Internet]. Durham, [North Carolina]: Duke University Press; 2017. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/rhul/detail.action?docID=5105854
11.
Shaw IGR. Predator Empire: The Geopolitics of US Drone Warfare. Geopolitics. 2013;18(3):536–59.
12.
Center for the Study of the Drone [Internet]. Available from: http://dronecenter.bard.edu/
13.
Annotated Bibliography on UAVs and the Social Sciences | Integrated Remote and In Situ Sensing | University of Colorado Boulder [Internet]. Available from: https://www.colorado.edu/iriss/society/annotated-bibliographies/annotated-bibliography-uavs-and-social-sciences
14.
Investigations - Forensic Architecture [Internet]. Available from: https://www.forensic-architecture.org/cases/
15.
Derek Gregory | geographical imaginations [Internet]. Available from: https://geographicalimaginations.com/author/derekjgregory/
16.
Spatial Machinations – Sam Kinsley [Internet]. Available from: http://www.samkinsley.com/
17.
Understanding Empire: Technology, Power, Politics [Internet]. Available from: https://understandingempire.wordpress.com/
18.
Adey P, Whitehead M, Williams A, editors. From Above: War, Violence and Verticality. London: Hurst & Company; 2013.
19.
Adey et al P, editor. From Above: War, Violence, and Verticality [Internet]. New York: Oxford University Press; 2013. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199334797.001.0001
20.
Birchnell T. Geography of Drones [Internet]. 2017. Available from: http://www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-9780199874002/obo-9780199874002-0165.xml#obo-9780199874002-0165-div2-0001
21.
Bissell D, Del Casino VJ. Whither Labor Geography and the Rise of the Robots? Social & Cultural Geography. 2017;18(3):435–42.
22.
Bissell D. Automation Interrupted: How Autonomous Vehicle Accidents Transform the Material Politics of Automation. Political Geography. 2018;65:57–66.
23.
Del Casino VJ. Social geographies II. Progress in Human Geography. 2016;40(6):846–55.
24.
Chamayou G. The Manhunt Doctrine [Internet]. Available from: https://www.radicalphilosophy.com/commentary/the-manhunt-doctrine
25.
Gregory D. The Everywhere War. The Geographical JournalForeign Affairs [Internet]. 2011;177(3):238–50. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41238044
26.
Kindervater KH. The Emergence of Lethal Surveillance: Watching and Killing in the History of Drone Technology. Security Dialogue. 2016;47(3):223–38.
27.
Klauser F, Pedrozo S. Power and Space in the Drone Age: A Literature Review and Politico-Geographical Research Agenda [Internet]. 2015. Available from: https://www.geogr-helv.net/70/285/2015/gh-70-285-2015.pdf
28.
Parks L, Kaplan C. Life in the Age of Drone Warfare. Durham: Duke University Press; 2017.
29.
Parks L, Kaplan C, editors. Life in the Age of Drone Warfare [Internet]. Durham, [North Carolina]: Duke University Press; 2017. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/rhul/detail.action?docID=5105854
30.
Moran J. Remote Warfare [Internet]. 2015. Available from: http://www.oxfordresearchgroup.org.uk/sites/default/files/JonMoranReport_PDF.pdf
31.
Remote Control Project | Oxford Research Group [Internet]. Available from: http://www.oxfordresearchgroup.org.uk/ssp/remote_control_project
32.
Rogers P. Security by ‘Remote Control’. The RUSI Journal. 2013;158(3):14–20.
33.
The Drone Papers: Secret Documents Detail the U.S. Assassination Program. [Internet]. Available from: https://theintercept.com/drone-papers/
34.
Aradau C. Security That Matters: Critical Infrastructure and Objects of Protection. Security Dialogue. 2010;41(5):491–514.
35.
Asaro PM. The Labor of Surveillance and Bureaucratized Killing: New Subjectivities of Military Drone Operators. Social Semiotics. 2013;23(2):196–224.
36.
Baggiarini B. Drone Warfare and the Limits of Sacrifice. Journal of International Political Theory. 2015;11(1):128–44.
37.
Bissell D, Del Casino VJ. Whither Labor Geography and the Rise of the Robots? Social & Cultural Geography. 2017;18(3):435–42.
38.
Coward M. Networks, Nodes and De-Territorialised Battlespace: The Scopic Regime of Rapid Dominance. In: Adey P, Whitehead M, Williams A, editors. From above: war, violence and verticality. London: Hurst & Company; 2013.
39.
Coward M. Networks, Nodes and De-Territorialised Battlespace: The Scopic Regime of Rapid Dominance. In: Adey et al P, editor. From Above: War, Violence, and Verticality [Internet]. New York: Oxford University Press; 2013. Available from: http://eu.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=13410214210002671&institutionId=2671&customerId=2670
40.
Gregory D. From a View to a Kill. Theory, Culture & Society. 2011;28(7–8):188–215.
41.
Holmqvist C. Undoing War: War Ontologies and the Materiality of Drone Warfare. Millennium: Journal of International Studies. 2013;41(3):535–52.
42.
Shaw IG. Robot Wars: US Empire and Geopolitics in the Robotic Age. Security Dialogue. 2017;48(5):451–70.
43.
Walters W. Drone Strikes, Dingpolitik and Beyond: Furthering the Debate on Materiality and Security. Security Dialogue. 2014;45(2):101–18.
44.
Weber J. Keep Adding. on Kill Lists, Drone Warfare and the Politics of Databases. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 2016;34(1):107–25.
45.
Wilcox L. Embodying Algorithmic War: Gender, Race, and the Posthuman in Drone Warfare. Security Dialogue. 2017;48(1):11–28.
46.
5000 Feet Is The Best (Interview w/ Drone Pilot) - YouTube [Internet]. Available from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-8dW1dg7KY
47.
What the Drone Saw – Video. Guardian [Internet]. 2013; Available from: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/video/2013/jul/25/drone-iwm-contemporary-omer-fast-art-video
48.
National Bird [Internet]. Available from: http://nationalbirdfilm.com/
49.
Meehan KM. The State of Objects. Political Geography. 2014;39:60–2.
50.
Pain R. Intimate War. Political Geography. 2015;44:64–73.
51.
Suchman L. Situational Awareness: Deadly Bioconvergence at the Boundaries of Bodies and Machines. MediaTropes [Internet]. 2015;5(1):1–24. Available from: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=cms&AN=103075485&site=ehost-live
52.
Allinson J. The Necropolitics of Drones. International Political Sociology. 2015;9(2):113–27.
53.
Boyle MJ. The Legal and Ethical Implications of Drone Warfare. The International Journal of Human Rights. 2015;19(2):105–26.
54.
Chamayou G. Drone Theory. UK: Penguin Books; 2015.
55.
Graham S. Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism. London: Verso; 2011.
56.
The Drone Operator and Identity: Exploring the Construction of Ethical Subjectivity in Drone Discourses [Internet]. Available from: http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/fass/journals/cadaad/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/05-Lee.pdf
57.
Pugliese J. Prosthetics of Law and the Anomic Violence of Drones. Griffith Law Review [Internet]. 2011;(4). Available from: http://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?public=false&handle=hein.journals/griffith20&id=941
58.
Schwarz E. Prescription Drones: On the Techno-Biopolitical Regimes of Contemporary ‘Ethical Killing’. Security Dialogue. 2016;47(1):59–75.
59.
Sharkey N, Suchman L. Wishful Mnemonics and Autonomous Killing Machines [Internet]. 2013. Available from: http://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/65657/1/Sharkey_Suchman_AISBQ_136.pdf
60.
Ronald Shaw IG, Akhter M. The Unbearable Humanness of Drone Warfare in FATA, Pakistan. Antipode. 2012;44(4):1490–509.
61.
Walsh JI, Schultzke M. The Ethics of Drone Strikes: Does Reducing the Cost of Conflict Encourage War? [Internet]. 2015. Available from: https://ssi.armywarcollege.edu/pdffiles/PUB1289.pdf
62.
Wilke C. Seeing and Unmaking Civilians in Afghanistan. Science, Technology, & Human Values. 2017;42(6):1031–60.
63.
Edney-Browne A, Ling L. Don’t Believe the Dangerous Myths of ‘Drone Warrior’ – LA Times [Internet]. Available from: http://beta.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-browne-ling-drones-memoir-brett-velicovich-20170716-story.html
64.
Theory of the Drone 1: Genealogies | Geographical Imaginations [Internet]. Available from: https://geographicalimaginations.com/2013/07/23/theory-of-the-drone-1-genealogies/
65.
Fuller C. Drone Strikes and Britain’s New Interpretation of International Law | British Politics and Policy at LSE [Internet]. Available from: http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/drone-strikes-and-britains-new-interpretation-of-international-law/
66.
Kennedy-Pipe C. Remote Control Project Briefing - ‘Drone Chic’ [Internet]. 2016. Available from: http://www.oxfordresearchgroup.org.uk/publications/briefing_papers_and_reports/%E2%80%98drone_chic%E2%80%99
67.
Schuller A. Position Paper on Use of Armed Drones by Germany [Internet]. Available from: https://www.ecchr.eu/en/documents/publications/articles/position-paper-on-use-of-armed-drones-by-germany.html
68.
Shaw I. Remote: A Documentary About Drones and Humans on Vimeo [Internet]. 2017. Available from: https://vimeo.com/222209662
69.
Adey P. Introduction: Air-Target Distance, Reach and the Politics of Verticality. Theory, Culture & Society. 2011;28(7–8):173–87.
70.
Aradau C|. The Signature of Security [Internet]. Available from: https://www.radicalphilosophy.com/commentary/the-signature-of-security
71.
Bishop R. Project Transparent Earth and the Autoscopy of Aerial Targting. In: Adey P, Whitehead M, Williams A, editors. From above: war, violence and verticality. London: Hurst & Company; 2013.
72.
Bishop R. Project Transparent Earth and the Autoscopy of Aerial Targting. In: Adey et al P, editor. From Above: War, Violence, and Verticality [Internet]. New York: Oxford University Press; 2013. Available from: http://eu.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=13410339150002671&institutionId=2671&customerId=2670
73.
Bryant B. Letter From a Sensor Operator. In: Life in the Age of Drone Warfare [Internet]. Durham: Duke University Press; 2017. Available from: http://eu.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=13410214200002671&institutionId=2671&customerId=2670
74.
Bryant B. Letter From a Sensor Operator. In: Parks L, Kaplan C, editors. Life in the Age of Drone Warfare [Internet]. Durham, [North Carolina]: Duke University Press; 2017. Available from: http://eu.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/action/uresolver.do?operation=resolveService&package_service_id=13410339140002671&institutionId=2671&customerId=2670
75.
Elden S. Secure the Volume: Vertical Geopolitics and the Depth of Power. Political Geography. 2013;34:35–51.
76.
Gregory D. Dirty Dancing: Drones and Death in the Borderlands [Internet]. 2016. Available from: https://geographicalimaginations.files.wordpress.com/2012/07/gregory-dirty-dancing-essay-final-long-june-2016.pdf
77.
Gregory D. The Colonial Present [Internet]. Available from: https://middleeastgeographies.files.wordpress.com/2014/12/gregory-the-colonial-present.pdf
78.
Parks L, Kaplan C. Life in the Age of Drone Warfare. Durham: Duke University Press; 2017.
79.
Parks L, Kaplan C, editors. Life in the Age of Drone Warfare [Internet]. Durham, [North Carolina]: Duke University Press; 2017. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/rhul/detail.action?docID=5105854
80.
Parks L. Drones, Vertical Mediation, and the Targeted Class. Feminist Studies. 2016;42(1).
81.
Schuppli S. Uneasy Listening. In: Forensis: The Architecture of Public Truth [Internet]. Berlin: Sternberg Press; 2014. Available from: https://susanschuppli.com/writing/uneasy-listening/
82.
Introduction to the Politics of Verticality [Internet]. Available from: https://www.opendemocracy.net/ecology-politicsverticality/article_801.jsp
83.
Williams AJ. Re-Orientating Vertical Geopolitics. Geopolitics. 2013;18(1):225–46.
84.
Cavarello J. Living Under Drones: Death, Injury and Trauma to Civilians From US Drone Practices in Pakistan [Internet]. 2012. Available from: http://chrgj.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Living-Under-Drones.pdf
85.
Edney-Browne A. What It’s Really Like to Live With Drone Warfare [Internet]. 2017. Available from: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-08-18/perspectives-from-the-front-line-of-the-drone-war/8793400
86.
Elden S. Secure the Volume: Vertical Geopolitics and the Depth of Power. Political Geography. 2013;34:35–51.
87.
Out of Sight, Out of Mind: A Visualization of Drone Strikes in Pakistan Since 2004 [Internet]. Available from: http://drones.pitchinteractive.com/
88.
Naming the Dead [Internet]. Available from: https://v1.thebureauinvestigates.com/namingthedead/?lang=en
89.
The Vertical Apartheid [Internet]. Available from: https://www.opendemocracy.net/north-africa-west-asia/eyal-weizman/vertical-apartheid
90.
Bridle J. One Visible Future [Internet]. 2013. Available from: http://onevisiblefuture.tumblr.com/post/44865882761/i-have-something-of-an-obsession-with-the-image
91.
Crandall J. Ontologies of the Wayward Drone: A Salvage Operation [Internet]. 2011. Available from: http://www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id=693
92.
Crampton JW. The New Political Economy of Geographical Intelligence. Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 2014;104(1):196–214.
93.
Dolnik A. Understanding Terrorist Innovation: Technology, Tactics and Global Trends [Internet]. London: Routledge; 2007. Available from: http://ezproxy01.rhul.ac.uk/login?url=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780203088944
94.
Elden S. Chamayou’s Manhunts: From Territory to Space? [Internet]. 2015. Available from: https://thefunambulist.net/history/the-funambulist-papers-46-chamayous-manhunts-from-territory-to-space-by-stuart-elden
95.
Jackman AH. From the Battlefield to the Homeland: The Changing Geographies of the Drone [Internet]. 2017. Available from: https://rhulgeopolitics.wordpress.com/2017/09/29/from-the-battlefield-to-the-homeland-the-changing-geographies-of-the-drone/
96.
Katz C. Banal Terrorism: Spatial Fetishism and Everyday Insecurity. In: Violent Geographies: Fear, Terror, and Political Violence. New York: Routledge; 2007. p. 349–61.
97.
Scharre P. Robotics on the Battlefield Part II: The Coming Swarm [Internet]. 2014. Available from: https://www.cnas.org/publications/reports/robotics-on-the-battlefield-part-ii-the-coming-swarm
98.
Shaw IGR. The Great War of Enclosure: Securing the Skies. Antipode. 2017;49(4):883–906.
99.
Springer S, Le Billon P. Violence and Space: An Introduction to the Geographies of Violence. Political Geography. 2016;52:1–3.
100.
Williams AJ. Enabling Persistent Presence? Performing the Embodied Geopolitics of the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Assemblage. Political Geography. 2011;30(7):381–90.
101.
Drone Survival Guide [Internet]. Available from: http://www.dronesurvivalguide.org/
102.
Gillis J. In Over Their Heads: U.S. Ground Forces are Dangerously Unprepared for Enemy Drones [Internet]. 2017. Available from: https://warontherocks.com/2017/05/in-over-their-heads-u-s-ground-forces-are-dangerously-unprepared-for-enemy-drones/
103.
Rassler D. Remotely Piloted Innovation: Terrorism, Drones and Supportive Technology [Internet]. 2016. Available from: https://ctc.usma.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Drones-Report.pdf
104.
Scharre P. Counter-Swarm: A Guide to Defeating Robotic Swarms [Internet]. 2015. Available from: https://warontherocks.com/2015/03/counter-swarm-a-guide-to-defeating-robotic-swarms/
105.
Feigenbaum A. From Cyborg Feminism to Drone Feminism: Remembering Women’s Anti-Nuclear Activisms. Feminist Theory. 2015;16(3):265–88.
106.
Franke FUE. A European Approach to Military Drones and Artificial Intelligence [Internet]. 2017. Available from: http://www.ecfr.eu/article/essay_a_european_approach_to_military_drones_and_artificial_intelligence
107.
Gilli A, Gilli M. The Diffusion of Drone Warfare? Industrial, Organizational, and Infrastructural Constraints. Security Studies. 2016;25(1):50–84.
108.
Graham SDN. Software-Sorted Geographies. Progress in Human Geography. 2005;29(5):562–80.
109.
Gregory D. Drone Geographies [Internet]. 2014. Available from: https://www.radicalphilosophy.com/article/drone-geographies
110.
Hall AR, Coyne CJ. The Political Economy of Drones. Defence and Peace Economics. 2014;25(5):445–60.
111.
Michael C. Horowitz. Separating Fact from Fiction in the Debate over Drone Proliferation. International Security [Internet]. 2016;41(2):7–42. Available from: https://muse.jhu.edu/article/638857
112.
Sayler K. A World of Proliferated Drones: A Technology Primer [Internet]. 2015. Available from: https://www.cnas.org/publications/reports/a-world-of-proliferated-drones-a-technology-primer
113.
Shaw IGR. Intervention Symposium – Algorithmic Governance [Internet]. 2019. Available from: http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/141684/7/141684.pdf
114.
Unmanned Ambitions - Peace organisation PAX [Internet]. Available from: https://www.paxforpeace.nl/publications/all-publications/unmanned-ambitions
115.
Brimblecombe-Fox K. Dronescapes [Internet]. 2017. Available from: https://kathrynbrimblecombeart.blogspot.co.uk/p/dronescapes.html
116.
Critical Algorithm Studies: a Reading List [Internet]. Available from: https://socialmediacollective.org/reading-lists/critical-algorithm-studies/
117.
The NSA Spy Hub in the Heart of Australia [Internet]. Available from: https://theintercept.com/2017/08/19/nsa-spy-hub-cia-pine-gap-australia/
118.
Drone Proliferation: Impacts on Security, Strategy, and Policy [Internet]. Available from: https://www.stimson.org/content/drone-proliferation-impacts-security-strategy-and-policy
119.
James Bridle Takes Us ‘Under the Shadow of the Drone’ [Internet]. Available from: https://creators.vice.com/en_uk/article/ezaj5k/under-the-shadow-of-the-drone
120.
Focus on Technology and Application of Autonomous Weapons [Internet]. Available from: https://www.ipraw.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/2017-08-17_iPRAW_Focus-On-Report-1.pdf
121.
UN SRCT Drone Inquiry [Internet]. Available from: http://unsrct-drones.com/
122.
Limiting Armed Drone Proliferation | Council on Foreign Relations [Internet]. Available from: https://www.cfr.org/report/limiting-armed-drone-proliferation
123.
Adey P. Blurred Lines: Intimacy, Mobility, and the Social Military. Critical Military Studies. 2016;2(1–2):7–24.
124.
Baker C. Writing About Embodiment as an Act of Translation. Critical Military Studies. 2016;2:120–4.
125.
Billo E, Mountz A. For Institutional Ethnography. Progress in Human Geography. 2016;40(2):199–220.
126.
Cohn C. Sex and Death in the Rational World of Defense Intellectuals. Signs [Internet]. 1987;12(4):687–718. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3174209
127.
Daggett C. Drone Disorientations - International Feminist Journal of Politics. Available from: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14616742.2015.1075317?needAccess=true
128.
Dolnik A. Resource 2: Conducting Field Research on Terrorism. In: Kennedy-Pipe et al C, editor. Terrorism and Political Violence. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications; 2015. p. 288–96.
129.
Fish A. Drones Caught in the Net. Imaginations [Internet]. 2016; Available from: http://imaginations.csj.ualberta.ca/?p=9964
130.
Gómez Cruz E, Sumartojo S, Pink S, editors. Non-Human Sensing: New Methodologies for the Drone Assemblage. In: Refiguring Techniques in Digital Visual Research [Internet]. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan; 2017. p. 13–23. Available from: http://ezproxy01.rhul.ac.uk/login?url=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9783319612225
131.
Gray H. Researching From the Spaces in Between? The Politics of Accountability in Studying the British Military. Critical Military Studies. 2016;2:70–83.
132.
Koopman S. Beware: Your Research May Be Weaponized. Annals of the American Association of Geographers. 2016;106(3):530–5.
133.
Rech MF. A Critical Geopolitics of Observant Practice at British Military Airshows. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. 2015;40(4):536–48.
134.
Weizman E. Introduction. In: Forensis: The Architecture of Public Truth [Internet]. Berlin: Sternberg Press; 2014. p. 9–32. Available from: https://architecture.mit.edu/sites/architecture.mit.edu/files/attachments/lecture/Weizman_Introduction-Forensis-libre.pdf
135.
Exposing the Invisible [Internet]. Available from: https://exposingtheinvisible.org/resources
136.
Edney-Browne A. Australian Universities Becoming Militarised [Internet]. Available from: https://medium.com/@alexedneybrowne/australian-universities-becoming-militarised-9b65f7c64076
137.
Gordillo G. Empire on Trial: The Forensic Appearance of Truth. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 2015;33(2):382–8.
138.
Reframing Drone Methodologies [Internet]. Available from: http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/cemore/reframing-drone-methodologies/
139.
Naming the Dead [Internet]. Available from: https://v1.thebureauinvestigates.com/namingthedead/?lang=en
140.
Jackman AH. Rhetorics of Possibility and Inevitability in Commercial Drone Tradescapes. Geographica Helvetica. 2016;71(1):1–6.
141.
Jensen OB. Drone City – Power, Design and Aerial Mobility in the Age of "Smart Cities”. Geographica Helvetica. 2016;71(2):67–75.
142.
Neocleous M. Air Power as Police Power. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 2013;31(4):578–93.
143.
Pedrozo S. Swiss Military Drones and the Border Space: A Critical Study of the Surveillance Exercised by Border Guards. Geographica Helvetica. 2017;72(1):97–107.
144.
Salter M. Toys for the Boys? Drones, Pleasure and Popular Culture in the Militarisation of Policing. Critical Criminology. 2014;22(2):163–77.
145.
Sandvik KB, Lohne K. The Rise of the Humanitarian Drone: Giving Content to an Emerging Concept. Millennium: Journal of International Studies. 2014;43(1):145–64.
146.
Shaw IGR. The Urbanization of Drone Warfare: Policing Surplus Populations in the Dronepolis. Geographica Helvetica. 2016;71(1):19–28.
147.
van Veeren E. Invisibility. In: Visual Global Politics. London: Taylor & Francis Ltd; 2017. p. 196–200.
148.
Wall T. Ordinary Emergency: Drones, Police, and Geographies of Legal Terror. Antipode. 2016;48(4):1122–39.
149.
Wall T, Monahan T. Surveillance and Violence From Afar: The Politics of Drones and Liminal Security-Scapes. Theoretical Criminology. 2011;15(3):239–54.
150.
Choi-Fitzpatrick A. Up in the Air: A Global Estimate of Non-Violent Drone Use 2009-2015 [Internet]. 2016. Available from: https://digital.sandiego.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1000&context=gdl2016report
151.
Dijstelbloem H. Migration Tracking Is a Mess. Nature. 2017;543(7643):32–4.
152.
Gettinger D. Drones at Home: Public Safety Drones. Center for the Study of the Drone [Internet]. 2017. Available from: http://dronecenter.bard.edu/files/2017/04/CSD-Public-Safety-Drones-Web.pdf
153.
Drones in Humanitarian Action - a Guide to the Use of Airborne Systems in Humanitarian Crises - World | Reliefweb [Internet]. Available from: https://reliefweb.int/report/world/drones-humanitarian-action-guide-use-airborne-systems-humanitarian-crises