Interpretive asymmetries, diagnostic inquiry and the reconstruction of action in an incident of friendly fire

Date

2013-10-03

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

In this article, we examine a controversial friendly fire incident that took place during the early stages of the Iraq war. Our focus is on how a cockpit video of the incident was used post facto in a military inquiry to arrive at an understanding of the actions of the pilots involved. We shall concentrate specifically on a series of interpretive difficulties that highlighted the problematic status of the video as evidence and explore what their resolution might tell us about military practice, and the place of friendly fire within it more broadly.

Description

Keywords

sociology of knowledge; friendly fire; interpretive asymmetries; retrospective inquiry; ethnomethodology, sociology of knowledge, friendly fire, interpretive asymmetries, retrospective inquiry, ethnomethodology

Citation

Mair, M., Elsey, C., Watson, P. G. and SMITH, P. V. (2013) Interpretive Asymmetry, Retrospective Inquiry and the Explication of Action in an Incident of Friendly Fire. Symbolic Interaction, 36 (4), pp. 398-416

Rights

Research Institute