David Vine Professor Department of Anthropology
- Degrees
- PhD and MA, Anthropology, Graduate Center, City University of New York
BA, Sociology, Wesleyan University - Languages Spoken
- English and proficient French, Morisyen (Mauritian Kreol), Seselwa (Seychelles Kreol); some Spanish and Italian
- Favorite Place in Washington DC
- Malcolm X Park
- Bio
-
I am the author of The United States of War: A Global History of America’s Endless Conflicts, from Columbus to the Islamic State (University of California Press, 2020), which is the third in a trilogy of books about war and peace, US foreign policy, and human rights. The United States of War was a finalist for the 2020 L.A. Times Book Prize for History. The prior books in this trilogy are Island of Shame: The Secret History of the U.S. Military Base on Diego Garcia (Princeton University Press, 2009) and Base Nation: How U.S. Military Bases Abroad Harm America and the World (Metropolitan/Holt, 2015).
More broadly, my work focuses on issues including inequality, social movements, forced displacement, refugees, US military bases abroad, race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexuality, and nationalism.
AU students and I have worked together in the AU Public Anthropology Clinic to assist social movements and organizations working on issues related to displacement, war and militarization, environmental damage, and refugees, among others. To learn about the Public Anthropology Clinic, visit: https://www.davidvine.net/publicanthropologyclinic.html
With the Network of Concerned Anthropologists, I helped write and compile Militarization: A Reader (Duke UP, 2019) and the Counter-Counterinsurgency Manual, or Notes on Demilitarizing American Society (Prickly Paradigm, 2009).
My other writing has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, the Guardian, Mother Jones, Politico, Foreign Policy in Focus, the Chronicle of Higher Education, and International Migration, among others.
I have also conducted research about gentrification in Brooklyn, NY, environmental refugees, homelessness and mental illness, and DC-area basketball. I was previously, briefly, a dancing waiter.
For links to my most recent writing, upcoming and past speaking events, and more information, see www.davidvine.net and www.basenation.us
In the Interest of Transparency: AU is not paying me during my current research leave; ordinarily I would earn an annual salary of $116,750. I'm lucky enough (thanks to my class privilege) to be debt free, and thus I donate all royalties and honoraria from books and speaking appearances to the Chagos Refugees Group and other not-for-profit organizations assisting victims of war and other forms of violence.
- See Also
- David's Website
- Website for David's book "Base Nation"
- AU Public Anthropology Clinic
- For the Media
- To request an interview for a news story, call AU Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.
Teaching
Fall 2023
-
ANTH-439 Culture, History, Power, Place: Anth of Violence in U.S.
-
ANTH-642 Public Anthropology
-
CORE-107 Complex Problems Seminar: Refugees, War & Human Rights
Partnerships & Affiliations
-
Network of Concerned Anthropologists
Steering Committee Member -
Tom Dispatch
Contributor -
Costs of War Project
Board Member and Contributor -
Foreign Policy in Focus
Contributor -
AU Public Anthropology Clinic
Director
Scholarly, Creative & Professional Activities
Research Interests
My scholarly interests include U.S. foreign and military policy, militarization and human rights, foreign military bases, forced displacement, gentrification, indigenous peoples, race/ethnicity, gender and sexuality, poverty and inequality, medical anthropology, urban anthropology, cities and urban development, the Indian Ocean, ethnography and writing ethnography for non-academic audiences, how scholarship can support social movements, and public anthropology.
Media Appearances
Some major recent appearances only. See https://www.davidvine.net/ and CV above for other appearances.
2022 AJ+. Why 90% of Foreign Military Bases Are American, January 12. Featured.
2021 Democracy Now! United States of War: How AUKUS Nuclear Submarine Deal Could Inflame Tension, Provoke War with China. September 23. Guest.
2021 USA Today. “A Reckoning Is Near”: America Has a Vast Overseas Military Empire. Does It Still Need It? February 25.
2021 Johnny Harris Videos. The US Military is Everywhere, February 24.
2020 New York Times. At Least 37 Million People Have Been Displaced by America’s War on Terror, September 8. Quoted, data used as source for article.
2020 Costs of War: 37 Million Displaced by the U.S. "War on Terror" since 9/11, Democracy Now, September 11. Guest.
2019 Al Jazeera. “Did the UK steal the Chagos Islands?” May 14. Guest.
2019 Newsweek. "Russia Asks Why It Should Leave Venezuela When U.S. Military Bases Cover the Whole World,” April 3. Base Nation map used.
2019 CNN.com. "Is the United States about to Lose Control of Its Secretive Diego Garcia Military Base?" March 10. Quoted.
2019 Salon.com. "Bases, Bases, Everywhere... Except in the Pentagon’s Report: According to Author David Vine, There Could Be Hundreds of Off-the-Books Military Bases around the World," January 11. Featured.
2019 Another Paradise. Directed by Olivier Magis. Clin d’oeil Films (Belgium).
2018 Newsweek, “V-J Day: U.S. Military Power in Asia Grew after World War II, But Do We Still Need Bases There?” August 22. Quoted.
2018 Los Angeles Times, “A Half-Century after Being Uprooted for a Remote U.S. Naval Base, These Islanders Are Still Fighting to Return.” August 14. Quoted.
2016 Cultural Anthropology: A Toolkit for a Global Age (W.W. Norton), Kenneth J. Guest. Two-page profile.
2016 Economist, “Go Home, Yankee,” August 13-19.
2016 Pivot TV, Truth and Power, “Camp Justice,” March 18. Profiled.
2016 NPR, Here and Now, January 27.
2015 NPR, On Point with Tom Ashbrook, “A New String of Military Bases Abroad?” December 14.
2015 NPR, To the Point, “Should the US Rethink the Huge Cost of Its Military Bases?” September 16.
2015 CSPAN-TV, “Book Discussion on Base Nation,” August 26. Book talk at Politics & Prose, Washington, DC.
2015 NPR, All Things Considered, “Do America’s Military Bases Abroad Help Or Hinder Global Security?” August 23.
Design and Communication Arts Work
Maps of US Military Bases Abroad, www.basenation.us/maps
Lists of U.S. Military Bases Abroad, 1776-2021. Spreadsheets, American University Library Digital Research Archive. https://doi.org/10.17606/7em4-hb13
The Chagos Archive. An online human rights documentation archive, ChagosArchive.org, designed by AU students and dedicated to collecting archival materials about the Chagossian people exiled during creation of the US military base on Diego Garcia.
The United States of War Social Media Videos, https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHclUm-p8jEKNE2DQRiCMVQoQp72xUQGb and www.instagram.com/david.s.vine
United States of War Coloring Book Maps, https://www.davidvine.net/usaempiremaps.html.
Selected Publications
Major, selected publications. See c.v. and davidvine.net for additional publications.
Books
2020 The United States of War: A Global History of America’s Endless Conflicts, from Columbus to the Islamic State. Oakland: University of California Press. [Finalist, LA Times Book Prize in History 2021; Winner, UC Press Series in Public Anthropology International Book Competition 2018.]
2015 Base Nation: How U.S. Military Bases Overseas Are Damaging America and the World. New York: Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt.
2009 Island of Shame: The Secret History of the U.S. Military Base on Diego Garcia. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Co-Authored/Edited Books
2019 Militarization: A Reader. Edited by Roberto González, Hugh Gusterson, and Gustaaf Housman, with David Vine, et al. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
2009 The Counter-Counterinsurgency Manual: On Demilitarizing American Society. Co-edited with Network of Concerned Anthropologists Steering Committee. Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press.
Articles and Book Chapters
2021 Drawdown: Improving U.S. and Global Security Through Military Base Closures Abroad. With Patterson Deppen and Leah Bolger. Quincy Brief no. 16, Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and World BEYOND War, September 20.
2021 Creating Refugees: Displacement Caused by the United States’ Post-9/11 Wars, 2021 Update. With Cala Coffman, Katalina Khoury, Madison Lovasz, Helen Bush, Rachael Leduc, and Jennifer Walkup. Costs of War Project, Brown University, August 19.
2021 This Was a Corrupt War to Its Core. The Guardian, August 19.
2021 Why the U.S. Is Trapped in “Endless War.” Big Think, August 12.
2021 Anthropology Must Advance Progressive Social Change. In “Collaborative Manifesto for Political Anthropology in an Age of Crises,” with Gwen Burnyeat, et al. Anthropology News, July 16.
2020 Creating Refugees: Displacement Caused by the United States’ Post-9/11 Wars. With Cala Coffman, Katalina Khoury, Madison Lovasz, Helen Bush, Rachael Leduc, and Jennifer Walkup. Costs of War Project, Brown University, September 8.
2020 Unpacking the Invisible Military Backpack: 56 Suggestions for Teaching about War. Radical Teacher. Vol. 117 (August).
2020 What 9/11 Taught Me about COVID-19. Anthro{dendum}. April 27.
2019 Reckoning with the Costs of War: It’s Time to Take Responsibility. The Hill, November 13.
2019 Military Spending Has Many Points of Contention: Closing Overseas Bases Isn’t One of Them. With Medea Benjamin, John Tierney, and Col. (Ret.) Lawrence Wilkerson. The Hill, July 17.
2019 No Bases? How Social Movements against U.S. Military Bases Abroad Are Challenging Militarization and Militarism. Current Anthropology 60, supp. 19, “Cultures of Militarism,” edited by Catherine Besteman and Hugh Gusterson.
2019 Troubling Past, Uncertain Future: How Disputed Islands, a US Military Base, and an Exiled People’s Fate Reflect a Transforming World. The Diplomat, July 1.
2018 Islands of Imperialism: Military Bases and the Ethnography of U.S. Empire in the Middle East. In Ethnographies of U.S. Empire, edited by Carole McGranahan and John Collins, 249-269. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
2018 After Kavanaugh’s Confirmation, Men Must Do More. The Eagle, November 16.
2017 Forty-five Blows Against Democracy: How U.S. Military Bases Back Dictators, Autocrats, and Military Regimes. TomDispatch.com, May 16.
2016 Everyone Has the Right to Live on Their Island. Why Not Us? Foreign Policy in Focus, December 6.
2016 Doubling Down on a Failed Strategy: The Pentagon’s Dangerous “New” Base Plan. TomDispatch.com, January 14.
2015 "My Body Was Not Mine, But the U.S. Military’s”: Inside the Disturbing Sex Industry Thriving around America’s Bases. Politico, November 1.
2015 Garrisoning the Globe: How U.S. Military Bases Abroad Undermine National Security and Harm Us All. TomDispatch.com, September 13.
2014 "We're Profiteers": How Military Contractors Reap Billions from U.S. Military Bases Overseas. Monthly Review 66(3).
2013 Tracing Paul Farmer's Influence. American University College of Arts and Sciences News, May 23.
2013 Compensating a People for the Loss of Their Homeland: Diego Garcia, the Chagossians, and the Human Rights Standards Damages Model. With Philip Harvey and S. Wojciech Sokolowski. Northwestern Journal of International Human Rights 11, no. 1: 152-185.
2012 The Lily-Pad Strategy: How the Pentagon Is Quietly Transforming Its Overseas Base Empire and Creating a Dangerous New Way of War. TomDispatch.com, July 16.
2012 Bipartisan Strategy Takes Shape to Close Overseas U.S. Bases. 2nd author, with Raymond DuBois. Defense News, January 29.
2011 Public Anthropology in Its Second Decade: Robert Borofsky’s Center for a Public Anthropology. American Anthropologist 113(2): 336-339.
2008 Homesick for Camp Justice. Mother Jones online, August 22.
2007 Enabling the Kill Chain. Chronicle of Higher Education, November 30: B9-10.
2007 Island of Injustice: The U.S. Has a Moral Duty to the People of Diego Garcia. The Washington Post, January 2: A17.
2003 Billions for Brooklyn—No Questions Asked: The Borough’s New Power Brokers. The Brooklyn Rail, Winter: 2-3. [3rd Place, New York City Independent Press Awards.]
Announcements
Join the Teaching the Costs of War Campaign!
"Unpacking the Invisible Military Backpack: 56 Suggestions for Teaching about War." From Radical Teacher. Vol. 117 (August 2020).
Professional Services
Expert witness, Research for US and UK lawsuits brought for Chagossians by attorneys Michael Tigar (Washington, DC) and Richard Gifford (London), 2001-present
Board Member and Contributor, Costs of War Project, Brown University
Steering Committee Member, Network for Concerned Anthropologists
Co-editor, "Public Anthropology Reviews," American Anthropologist, 2009-2012