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A space for sharing and discussing news related to global current events, technology, and society.
69452 Members
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© 2020 Relevant Protocols Inc.
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"Forensic Architecture, the research agency that investigates human rights violations, has undertaken: airstrikes, at sea, borders, chemical attacks, detention, disappearance, environmental violence, fire, forensic oceanography, heritage, land rights, migration, and police violence. In order to conduct these investigations, they have utilized fifteen methodologies: 3-D modeling, audio analysis, data mining, fluid dynamics, geolocation, ground truth, image complex, software development, pattern analysis, photogrammetry, reenactment, remote sensing, situated testimony, synchronization, and open-source intelligence (OSINT). At the time of writing, they have completed forty-three investigations. "The working definition of Forensic Architecture’s “environmental violence” category is “the destruction of the natural and built environment as part of a military strategy” or the “destruction and reconfiguration of the built and natural environment and, crucially, of the relation between them.”2 If the first is an indirect form of violence that operates through the degradation of environmental conditions, including quality of land, water, air, and nutrition, by “restricting trade and access to life-sustaining infrastructure,” then the second refers to “modes of association, worship, agriculture, and economy” and is “exercised by attempting to affect the political subjectivity of native people and give rise to populations conducive to state or colonial control.”3"
"Forensic Architecture, the research agency that investigates human rights violations, has undertaken: airstrikes, at sea, borders, chemical attacks, detention, disappearance, environmental violence, fire, forensic oceanography, heritage, land rights, migration, and police violence. In order to conduct these investigations, they have utilized fifteen methodologies: 3-D modeling, audio analysis, data mining, fluid dynamics, geolocation, ground truth, image complex, software development, pattern analysis, photogrammetry, reenactment, remote sensing, situated testimony, synchronization, and open-source intelligence (OSINT). At the time of writing, they have completed forty-three investigations. "The working definition of Forensic Architecture’s “environmental violence” category is “the destruction of the natural and built environment as part of a military strategy” or the “destruction and reconfiguration of the built and natural environment and, crucially, of the relation between them.”2 If the first is an indirect form of violence that operates through the degradation of environmental conditions, including quality of land, water, air, and nutrition, by “restricting trade and access to life-sustaining infrastructure,” then the second refers to “modes of association, worship, agriculture, and economy” and is “exercised by attempting to affect the political subjectivity of native people and give rise to populations conducive to state or colonial control.”3"
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