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Security Dialogue
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What's this?

Network-Centric Violence, Critical Infrastructure and the Urbanization of Security

Martin Coward

Politics, Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK

This article addresses the question of whether contemporary global urbanization is characterized by a distinctive relationship between the city and warfare. In particular, it examines the specific way in which two particular forms of warfare — so-called Al-Qaeda terrorism and US tactics in Iraq — target urban infrastructure. I argue that infrastructure is targeted because it is a constitutive feature of contemporary urban life. Metropolitan life is marked by its constitutive relation to urban infrastructure. The article thus suggests that this targeting of infrastructure provides a lens through which to investigate some of the central questions posed by the contemporary urbanization of security.

Key Words: urbanization • security • war • critical infrastructure • terrorism

Security Dialogue, Vol. 40, No. 4-5, 399-418 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0967010609342879


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