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Future war in cities: Urbanization's challenge to strategic studies in the 21st century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 February 2017

Abstract

This article argues that, despite an ongoing global revolution in urban demography, most Western military research into urbanization is narrowly focused and remains disengaged from the interdisciplinary expertise of urban studies. Because so many cities are sui generis in terms of their governance, architectural design and demographic composition, the art of war must seek closer interaction with the science of cities. In the coming years, in order to control armed violence and reduce casualties across an urbanizing world, military analysts must seek greater cooperation with urban specialists. The common aim must be to develop an urban-oriented strand of strategic studies that is firmly based on a sophisticated understanding of the ecology of cities. Such a cooperative approach will assist in the development of military methods of operating in cities using appropriate rules of engagement that embrace international humanitarian law.

Type
The problem
Copyright
Copyright © icrc 2017 

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References

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32 US Army Megacities Paper, above note 31, pp. 5, 8.

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42 Ibid ., pp. 49, 66.

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44 K. Savage and R. Muggah, above note 40.

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58 Ibid ., pp. 10–11.

59 Ibid ., pp. 19–20, 25–27.

60 Ibid ., pp. 13, 20

61 Ibid ., pp. 57–58.

62 Scales, Robert H. Jr., “Urban Warfare: A Soldier's View”, Military Review, Vol. 85, No. 1, 2005, p. 10Google Scholar.

63 M. Evans, above note 33, pp. 33–43.

64 Scales, Robert H. Jr., “The Indirect Approach: How US Military Forces Can Avoid the Pitfalls of Future Urban Warfare”, in Future Warfare, US Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, PA, 1999 Google Scholar.

65 J. Kotkin, above note 12, p. xviii.

66 Small Arms Survey, above note 53, p. 188.