Trably, Laurianne

Émilie POTIN, Séparations familiales à l’ère du numérique, Toulouse, Érès, 2024, 189 p. - 2025.


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In the military context, designing weapons means creating equipment that is useful in combat. As this innovative work involves life-and-death issues, it is very particular in moral terms: ‘we innovate to kill’, said an officer interviewed during my inquiry. Based on my ethnographic study of the 24h of Innovation, ‘Special Forces’ edition, I describe the conditions under which it becomes possible to initiate engineering students, most of whom are civilians, in the creation of tools of war – an activity with potentially lethal implications. By describing the ‘framing’ and ‘coordination’ that support this innovation work carried out jointly by engineering students and Special Forces, I show that this 24-hour programme takes on a heterotopic form in which all participants can end up playing at making weapons without feeling any ethical qualms.