Film Screening: Human Terrain

Event and Presentation
Michael D. English
Michael D. English
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Film Screening: Human Terrain
Event Date:

June 12, 2012 7:00PM

Event Location: Arlington Truland Building 7th Floor West Wing
Past Event
Event Type: Event

Instead of another Summer Detention reading group, the Unrestees have decided to host an informal film and discussion group. We are going to meet around the 2nd Tuesday of each month in June, July and August. The first film we are watching is Human Terrain the Movie. The movie deals with the role of anthropologists working Human Terrain Teams in Afghanistan and Iraq. More details here: http://humanterrainmovie.com/

‘Human Terrain’ is two stories in one. The first exposes a new Pentagon effort to enlist the best and the brightest in a struggle for hearts and minds. Facing long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. military initiates ‘Human Terrain Systems’, a controversial program that seeks to make cultural awareness the centerpiece of the new counterinsurgency strategy. Designed to embed social scientists with combat troops, the program swiftly comes under attack as a misguided and unethical effort to gather intelligence and target enemies. Gaining rare access to wargames in the Mojave Desert and training exercises at Quantico and Fort Leavenworth, ‘Human Terrain’ takes the viewer into the heart of the war machine and a shadowy collaboration between American academics and the military.

The other story is about a brilliant young scholar who leaves the university to join a Human Terrain team. After working as a humanitarian activist in the Western Sahara, Balkans, East Timor and elsewhere, and winning a Marshall Scholarship to study at Oxford, Michael Bhatia returns to Brown University to take up a visiting fellowship. In the course of conducting research on military cultural awareness, he is recruited by the Human Terrain program and eventually embeds with the 82nd Airborne in eastern Afghanistan. On the way to mediate an intertribal dispute, Bhatia is killed when his humvee hits a roadside bomb.

War becomes academic, academics go to war, and the personal tragically merges with the political, raising new questions about the ethics, effectiveness, and high costs of counterinsurgency.

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