Stop asking questions about Bahrain
Evicting a CAAT protestor
Olver sneaks out
Ian King is charming at lunch
Jill Gibbon
Stop asking questions about Bahrain
Evicting a CAAT protestor
Olver sneaks out
Ian King is charming at lunch
A sign at the entrance to the Defense and Security Equipment International arms fair warns that visitors must wear business dress. The pinstriped suits, school ties and polished shoes shroud the event in sham respectability. However, the dress code does not extend to sales staff. Here, the main aim is to entice.
Women's clothing Guns and bumsThis is the first of a series of drawings from DSEi 2011.
As the world’s largest arms fair, DSEi is part of a wider shift in the commercialisation of war. Although arms companies have always profited from conflict, military production was previously linked to the perceived needs of the state.
In the 1990s this changed. Arms companies responded to the reduction of military budgets at the end of the Cold War by expanding beyond state boundaries, merging into multinationals and…