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Index
Dedication
Introduction: Anthropology’s Military Shadow
Part 1: Politics, Ethics, and the Military Intelligence Complex’s Quiet Triumphal Return to Campus
Chapter One: War is a Force that Gives Anthropology Ethics
Chapter Two: The CIA’s University Spies - PRISP, ICSP, NSEP, and the Big Payback
Chapter Three: Social Science in Harness - The Gravitational Distortions of the Minerva Initiative
Chapter Four: Silent Coup - How the CIA Welcomed Itself Back onto American University Campuses Without Public Protest
Part 2: Manuals: Deconstructing the Texts of Cultural Warfare
Chapter Five: The Leaky Ship of Human Terrain Systems
Chapter Six: Commandeering Scholarship - The New Counterinsurgency Manual, Anthropology, and Academic Pillaging
Chapter Seven: The Military Leveraging of Cultural Knowledge - The 2004 Stryker Report Evaluating Iraq Failures
Chapter Eight: Rendering Cultural Complexities as Stereotype - Anthropological Reflections on the Special Forces Advisor Guide
Part 3: Counterinsurgency Theories, Fantasies, and Harsh Realities
Chapter Nine: Human Terrain Dissenter - Inside Human Terrain Team Training’s Heart of Darkness
Chapter Ten: Going Native - Hollywood’s Human Terrain Avatars
Chapter Eleven: Problems with Counterinsurgent Anthropological Theory - or, by the Time a Military Relies on Counterinsurgency for Foreign Victories it has Already Lost
Chapter Twelve: Working for Robots - Human Terrain, Anthropologists and the War in Afghanistan
References Cited
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