The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social Sciences

Drones are increasingly becoming a ubiquitous feature of society. They are being used for a multiplicity of applications for military, leisure, economic, and academic purposes. Their application in academia, especially as social science research tools, has seen a sharp uptake in the last decade. Thi...

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Main Authors: Ola Hall, Ibrahim Wahab
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-10-01
Series:Drones
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2504-446X/5/4/112
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author Ola Hall
Ibrahim Wahab
author_facet Ola Hall
Ibrahim Wahab
author_sort Ola Hall
collection DOAJ
description Drones are increasingly becoming a ubiquitous feature of society. They are being used for a multiplicity of applications for military, leisure, economic, and academic purposes. Their application in academia, especially as social science research tools, has seen a sharp uptake in the last decade. This has been possible due, largely, to significant developments in computerization and miniaturization, which have culminated in safer, cheaper, lighter, and thus more accessible drones for social scientists. Despite their increasingly widespread use, there has not been an adequate reflection on their use in the spatial social sciences. There is need for a deeper reflection on their application in these fields of study. Should the drone even be considered a tool in the toolbox of the social scientist? In which fields is it most relevant? Should it be taught as a course in the social sciences much in the same way that spatially-oriented software packages have become mainstream in institutions of higher learning? What are the ethical implications of its application in spatial social science? This paper is a brief reflection on these questions. We contend that drones are a neutral tool which can be good and evil. They have actual and potentially wide applicability in academia but can be a tool through which breaches in ethics can be occasioned given their unique abilities to capture data from vantage perspectives. Researchers therefore need to be circumspect in how they deploy this powerful tool which is increasingly becoming mainstream in the social sciences.
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spelling doaj.art-525315cf1c2a4418a8aa5c824b2a13152023-11-23T07:57:17ZengMDPI AGDrones2504-446X2021-10-015411210.3390/drones5040112The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social SciencesOla Hall0Ibrahim Wahab1Department of Human Geography, Lund University, SE-223 62 Lund, SwedenDepartment of Human Geography, Lund University, SE-223 62 Lund, SwedenDrones are increasingly becoming a ubiquitous feature of society. They are being used for a multiplicity of applications for military, leisure, economic, and academic purposes. Their application in academia, especially as social science research tools, has seen a sharp uptake in the last decade. This has been possible due, largely, to significant developments in computerization and miniaturization, which have culminated in safer, cheaper, lighter, and thus more accessible drones for social scientists. Despite their increasingly widespread use, there has not been an adequate reflection on their use in the spatial social sciences. There is need for a deeper reflection on their application in these fields of study. Should the drone even be considered a tool in the toolbox of the social scientist? In which fields is it most relevant? Should it be taught as a course in the social sciences much in the same way that spatially-oriented software packages have become mainstream in institutions of higher learning? What are the ethical implications of its application in spatial social science? This paper is a brief reflection on these questions. We contend that drones are a neutral tool which can be good and evil. They have actual and potentially wide applicability in academia but can be a tool through which breaches in ethics can be occasioned given their unique abilities to capture data from vantage perspectives. Researchers therefore need to be circumspect in how they deploy this powerful tool which is increasingly becoming mainstream in the social sciences.https://www.mdpi.com/2504-446X/5/4/112droneslegislationethicsspatial social sciences
spellingShingle Ola Hall
Ibrahim Wahab
The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social Sciences
Drones
drones
legislation
ethics
spatial social sciences
title The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social Sciences
title_full The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social Sciences
title_fullStr The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social Sciences
title_full_unstemmed The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social Sciences
title_short The Use of Drones in the Spatial Social Sciences
title_sort use of drones in the spatial social sciences
topic drones
legislation
ethics
spatial social sciences
url https://www.mdpi.com/2504-446X/5/4/112
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