Weaponized unmanned aerial vehicles have been hailed as powerful tools for reducing the threat of global terrorism, but what happens when they instill terror? One possibility is that the military’s use of armed drones may actually increase non-state terrorism.

Christopher J. Coyne is a Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute, Professor of Economics at George Mason University, and Co-Editor of The Independent Review.
Twitter      Email
Abigail R. Hall is a Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute, and an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Tampa.
Twitter     
Civil Liberties and Human RightsCrime, Criminal Justice, and PrisonsDefense and Foreign PolicyIraqLaw and LibertyNorth Africa and The Middle EastPrivacyTerrorism and Homeland Security
Other Independent Review articles by Christopher J. Coyne
Spring 2024 Murray Rothbard on War and Foreign Policy
Fall 2023 Kenneth Boulding: Knowledge, Conflict, and Power
Summer 2023 A Symposium on Gene Sharp’s The Politics of Nonviolent Action
[View All (46)]
Other Independent Review articles by Abigail R. Hall
Spring 2023 How to Run Wars: A Confidential Playbook for the National Security Elite
Fall 2021 Militarized Extremism: The Radical Right and the War on Terror
Summer 2021 Walter E. Williams: Scholar, Teacher, and Public Intellectual
[View All (9)]