Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in Canada

Focusing on the political economy of communication and the process of spatialization whereby control over space and time is extended through the use of information and communication technology (ICT), this paper provides an overview of the intersections that draw the Canadian federal government, its...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Patricia Mazepa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Saint Paul University 2015-06-01
Series:Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1501/v8i1_mazepa.pdf
id doaj-9b4a32d4b88340cd9f16a3f5186000ed
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9b4a32d4b88340cd9f16a3f5186000ed2020-12-02T07:06:03ZengSaint Paul UniversityGlobal Media Journal: Canadian Edition1918-59011918-59012015-06-0181930Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in CanadaPatricia Mazepa0York UniversityFocusing on the political economy of communication and the process of spatialization whereby control over space and time is extended through the use of information and communication technology (ICT), this paper provides an overview of the intersections that draw the Canadian federal government, its military, and the ICT, defence and security industries into relationships that reinforce and extend their control. By attending to historical and current examples, it highlights several sub-processes of spatialization, including corporate restructuring (through vertical and horizontal integration), as well as state restructuring (principally through internationalization and commercialization), which together underpin and support the militarization of communication. From the state’s concentration on conventional war and the “Cold War”, through to the current “War on Terror” and its protection of an integrated ICT infrastructure, communication is increasingly confined within a narrow militarized and corporatized framework. Within this framework, both capital and the military prioritize the development and administration of the “command and control” capabilities of ICT, such that the policies and practices of communication become more exclusive, restrictive and surveilled, and less open, accessible, and universal. The paper seeks to explain how this tripartite combination of “command, control, and communication” is indicative of the process of spatialization, and supports a militarized capitalism and the formation of a cross-border MICC poised to expand and defend it.http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1501/v8i1_mazepa.pdfCommercializationCommunication TechnologyCommunication’s ComplexInternationalizationPolitical EconomySecuritySpatialization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patricia Mazepa
spellingShingle Patricia Mazepa
Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in Canada
Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
Commercialization
Communication Technology
Communication’s Complex
Internationalization
Political Economy
Security
Spatialization
author_facet Patricia Mazepa
author_sort Patricia Mazepa
title Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in Canada
title_short Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in Canada
title_full Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in Canada
title_fullStr Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Manifest Spatialization: Militarizing Communication in Canada
title_sort manifest spatialization: militarizing communication in canada
publisher Saint Paul University
series Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition
issn 1918-5901
1918-5901
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Focusing on the political economy of communication and the process of spatialization whereby control over space and time is extended through the use of information and communication technology (ICT), this paper provides an overview of the intersections that draw the Canadian federal government, its military, and the ICT, defence and security industries into relationships that reinforce and extend their control. By attending to historical and current examples, it highlights several sub-processes of spatialization, including corporate restructuring (through vertical and horizontal integration), as well as state restructuring (principally through internationalization and commercialization), which together underpin and support the militarization of communication. From the state’s concentration on conventional war and the “Cold War”, through to the current “War on Terror” and its protection of an integrated ICT infrastructure, communication is increasingly confined within a narrow militarized and corporatized framework. Within this framework, both capital and the military prioritize the development and administration of the “command and control” capabilities of ICT, such that the policies and practices of communication become more exclusive, restrictive and surveilled, and less open, accessible, and universal. The paper seeks to explain how this tripartite combination of “command, control, and communication” is indicative of the process of spatialization, and supports a militarized capitalism and the formation of a cross-border MICC poised to expand and defend it.
topic Commercialization
Communication Technology
Communication’s Complex
Internationalization
Political Economy
Security
Spatialization
url http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/1501/v8i1_mazepa.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT patriciamazepa manifestspatializationmilitarizingcommunicationincanada
_version_ 1724408380196388864