News & Press

18 Sep

NEW ARTICLE IN POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY

The article develops a simple but important argument: “conflict free” minerals are essential to the waging of contemporary war. This argument is substantiated over three main sections. First, we provide historical background to the idea of “conflict minerals” to show how they are narrowly associated with the violence of extraction and with consumer products (phones, electric vehicles, etc) in way that forecloses their use in weapons manufacturing and war further along the supply chain. Second, we draw from fieldwork in Rwanda and secondary sources to explicate the ways that minerals attain “conflict free” certification despite documented links with conflict in central Africa. Transparency in supply chains, we show, is carefully angled: issues of provenance (i.e., the movement of minerals to and in Rwanda) are obscured yet meticulous systems are in place to enable and trace the movement of minerals from Rwanda. In the third section, we focus on the supply of tin and tantalum from Rwanda to weapons suppliers and outline the use of those minerals in contemporary military hardware. In conclusion we sketch an agenda for future research on “conflict free” minerals that go to war.

10 Oct

New Article in Antipode

warandgeos / News / / 0 Comments

As part of the War and geos, we have recently published the article ‘Israel’s War on Gaza in a Global Frame’ open access through Antipode. The article can be found here

‘The objective of this article is to set out lines of international complicity in
Israel’s war on Gaza towards establishing not merely a refreshed agenda for research
but also strategic sites of accountability and intervention. The article surveys Israeli mili-
tary activities in Gaza since the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks, drawing focus on three
key points of international military collaboration: the F-16 fighter jet; the GBU type
bomb; and the weapons manufacturer, Elbit Systems. We then turn to multiple other
geographies of exchange that are visible through a global frame, including military aid,
ideological support, and the deployment of military personnel from overseas. The article
thus substantiates an argument that Israeli military violence in Gaza depends on a global
network of supply, demand, and complicity whose extraneous relationship with the
state indicates politically urgent sites of critical inquiry and intervention.’