collects essays and public talks critically examining the ways that American academia is increasingly being militarized.

The below pieces critically examine the roles played by anthropology in Presidents Bush and Obama's domestic and international military campaigns. As the "war on terror" reveals increasing the military and intelligence agency's ignorance about regions and cultures of world where the Bush administration desires to impose military hegemony, there are renewed desires to use anthropological knowledge formilitarized ends. While the current calls to apply anthropology for a newly conceptualized terror war appear to underestimate the extent of past applications and misapplications of anthropology to the needs of warfare, anthropology has regularly been deployed throughout the wars of the Twentieth Century--deployments that continue to raise serious ethical issues for anthropology. My 2011 book,