Technologies of Genocide

In this series, we speak with writers, scholars, technologists and movement builders documenting and resisting the digital and material infrastructures of mass violence. From Gaza to Myanmar, from Kashmir to Xinjiang from Tamil Eelam to Sudan, we map what the law has refused to name for far too long, that states do not act alone. They are enabled by platforms, financed by banks, armed by corporations, and legitimized by manufactured silence.
What does genocide look like in the digital age? Not just bodies under the rubble, open-air prisons, mass graves and scorched hospitals. But fibre optic cables and data centres. Predictive algorithms, Surveillance apps and shadowban. Genocide, now, is not only live-streamed and monetised, it is encrypted behind the clean interface of profit.