War Photography Ethics

Posted in Photography by admin on December 3, 2008 No Comments yet

War Photography Ethics

Learn More About Aerial And Satellite Photography

Aerial photography is defined as the capturing of an image from a camera which is not supported by a ground based structure. This can include anything from an aircraft, helicopter or air balloon to a kite, blimp or miniature plane.

The history of aerial photography is diverse and began nearly as soon as the camera was invented. Gaspar Felix Tournachon was a French balloonist and photographer who spent three years perfecting a technique to capture a small village in France for surveying purposes.

Unfortunately his photographers did not survive so the oldest aerial image is one of Boston taken from an air balloon in 1860. As air balloons were expensive and cumbersome to operate other more accessible techniques were developed including kites and even carrier pigeons.

There were obvious drawbacks to these methods including the flight paths not being reliable however it was not long before the first images were capture from a plane. It was in World War I when the photographic discipline really took off with both sides using planes so capture images of the opposing lines of defence.

Following the end of the war the developed techniques were put to non-military use with consecutive aerial photographs being linked together to create maps. These maps were put to many different uses and were found to have significant commercial value.

Today the images are not just used for mapping. Many industry sectors benefit from aerial photography, from commercial real estate to the film industry. Images are used for property assessment, water utilization, archaeology and safety planning, to name but a few.

Today as in many photographic disciplines digital photography has replace celluloid and now satellite images are extremely popular and accessible. The Satellite pictures offer a similar use as its predecessor however each has their respective benefits.

Aerial photographs offer an analogue of images at higher resolution which have a 3D stereo effect and are easier to in interpret due to a higher understanding of the image. However Satellite offers a greater areal extent with exclusively digital data and repetitive coverage of a greater wavelength, the data is also easier to analyse.

There are some problems highlighted by a comparison with non-aerial photography. Often images will be taken at an angle to the subject creating a distortion in perception with nearer objects being larger in relation with subjects further away. Certain providers of satellite images solve this problem using software packages, correcting distortion and creating 3D images of terrain.

Although the uses of aerial photography have become increasingly commercialised its military routes have not been forgotten. Aerial photographs appear regularly in the news and airspace is carefully restricted due to massive advances in spy technology, descendants from the original World War I reconnaissance aircraft.

Satellites have been synonymous with reconnaissance or spying as it is otherwise known. High resolution photography can be obtained from satellites and the information can be used in detecting anything from small military manoeuvres to missile launches. Most of the US Satellite programmes post 1974 are still considered highly sensitive and are classified.

Today aerial and satellite photography is a lucrative industry. The Professional Aerial Photographers Association or PAPA is an international trade organisation for the industry and more information about the history and ethics surrounding aerial photography can be obtained from their website.

About the Author

Shaun Parker is a leading aeriel photographer with many years of experience in aeriel photography.


Under Fire


Under Fire


$9.49


Under Fire is a savvy political thriller of journalists in war-torn Nicaragua circa 1979. Clayton Frohman and Ron Shelton’s (Bull Durham) script follows ace photojournalist Russell Price (Nick Nolte, in a key marquee performance) from the jungles of Africa to the Central American boiling point. Along with the usual band of fellow journalists, Price finds himself involved in a love triangle with C…

Regarding the Pain of Others


Regarding the Pain of Others


$14.41


A brilliant, clear-eyed new consideration of the visual representation of violence in our culture–its ubiquity, meanings, and effectsWatching the evening news offers constant evidence of atrocity–a daily commonplace in our “society of spectacle.” But are viewers inured -or incited–to violence by the daily depiction of cruelty and horror? Is the viewer’s perception of reality eroded by the unive…

Bulletin


Bulletin



Bulletin was originally a radio play for the BBC World Service. It is based on a true story; with twenty-four hours until the next Reuters dispatch, I head to the perilous Dubrinya suburb and encounter a military funeral bombarded by sniper fire. Whilst photographing the injured mourners, a Sarajevean claims I’m profiting from their suffering. It has taken twenty years to write down what happened …


Body Horror: Photojournalism, Catastrophe and War (Critical Image)


Body Horror: Photojournalism, Catastrophe and War (Critical Image)


$78.96


What compels us to look at shocking photographs or, alternatively, to look away? Should the media use disturbing images to inform, at the risk of offending? How is our sense of politics, morality, and culture affected when we are exposed to gruesome images of accidents and disasters, murder and execution, grief and death? In Body Horror, John Taylor addresses these questions by examining how the m…

Ethics


Ethics


$39.31


The crown jewel of Bonhoeffer’s body of work, Ethics is the culmination of his theological and personal odyssey. Based on careful reconstruction of the manuscripts, freshly and expertly translated and annotated, this new critical edition features an insightful Introduction by Clifford Green and an Afterword from the German edition’s editors. Though caught up in the vortex of momentous forces in the Nazi period, Bonhoeffer systematically envisioned a radically Christocentric, incarnational ethic for a post-war world, purposefully recasting Christians’ relation to history, politics, and public life. This edition allows scholars, theologians, ethicists, and serious Christians to appreciate the cogency and relevance of Bonhoeffer’s vision.

The Ethics of War and Peace by Christopher, Paul Edition REV, 3


The Ethics of War and Peace by Christopher, Paul Edition REV, 3


$20.49


The Ethics of War and Peace by Christopher, Paul

Ethics and War in the 21st Century


Ethics and War in the 21st Century


$39.53


This book explores the ethical implications of war in the contemporary world. The author, a leading theorist of warfare, explains why it is of crucial importance that Western countries should continue to apply traditional ethical rules and practices in war, even when engaging with international terrorist groups. The book uses the work of the late American philosopher Richard Rorty to explain the need to make ethical rules central to the conduct of military operations. Arguing that the question of ethics was re-opened by the ‘War on Terror’, the book then examines America’s post-9/11 redefinition of its own prevailing discourse of war. It ends with a discussion of other key challenges to the ethics of war, such as the rise of private security companies and the use of robots in war. In exploring these issues, this book seeks to place ethics at the centre of debates about the conduct of future warfare. This book will be of great interest to all students of military ethics, war studies, military history and strategic studies in general, and to military colleges in particular.

War/Photography (Hardcover)


War/Photography (Hardcover)


$99.48


War/Photography surveys both iconic and newly discovered photographs of war and conflict, from daguerreotypes documenting the Crimean and American Civil Wars to digital images made by soldiers in 21st-century Iraq. Accompanying a landmark exhibition opening at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, it is generously illustrated with over 525 powerful images and includes texts by some of today`s most important scholars of war photography. This ambitious book offers a comprehensive investigation of the relationship between photography and armed conflict.The featured works represent a range of perspectives?from journalists to soldiers to ordinary citizens?and span six continents, yet together they communicate the consummate experience of war: its brutality, humanity, and even humor. The book`s essays investigate the immediate impact, dissemination, and historical influence of war photography.

War, Torture and Terrorism: Ethics and War in the 21st Century


War, Torture and Terrorism: Ethics and War in the 21st Century


$30.34


This collection by leading scholars represents state of the art writings on the ethics of war. Many of the most important and contested controversies in modern war receive comprehensive discussion: the practice of torture, terrorism, assassination and targeted killing, the bombing of civilians in war, humanitarian intervention, and the invasion of Iraq Analytical introduction provides a guide to recent developments in the ethics of war An excellent overview for general readers interested in the current debate and controversies over the ethics of war

Terrorism and the Ethics of War


Terrorism and the Ethics of War


$34.53


Most people strongly condemn terrorism; yet they often fail to say how terrorist acts differ from other acts of violence such as the killing of civilians in war. Stephen Nathanson argues that we cannot have morally credible views about terrorism if we focus on terrorism alone and neglect broader issues about the ethics of war. His book challenges influential views on the ethics of war, including the realist view that morality does not apply to war, and Michael Walzer’s defence of attacks on civilians in ‘supreme emergency’ circumstances. It provides a clear definition of terrorism, an analysis of what makes terrorism morally wrong, and a rule-utilitarian defence of noncombatant immunity, as well as discussions of the Allied bombings of cities in World War II, collateral damage, and the clash between rights theories and utilitarianism. It will interest a wide range of readers in philosophy, political theory, international relations, and law.



 The Photography Handbook


The Photography Handbook


$37.64


New – Revised and updated, this second edition of The Photography Handbook provides an introduction to the principles of photographic practice and theory and offers guidelines for the systematic study of photographic media. Including a new chapter on the ethics of photojournalism, and an expanded chapter on digital photography, as well as a new section on research in photography, The Photography Handbook includes: new case studies of the war photographer James Nachtwey photographic representat
Leave a Comment

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree