Abstract
The
utility of the dog as a mine detector has divided the mine clearance
community since dogs were first used for this purpose during the Second
World War. This paper adopts a historical perspective to investigate
how, why, and to what consequence, the use of minedogs remains contested
despite decades of research into their abilities. It explores the
changing factors that have made it possible to think that dogs could, or
could not, serve as reliable detectors of landmines over time.
Beginning with an analysis of the
wartime
context that shaped the creation of minedogs, the paper then examines
two contemporaneous investigations undertaken in the 1950s. The first, a
British investigation pursued by the anatomist Solly Zuckerman,
concluded that dogs could never be the mine hunter's best friend. The
second, an American study led by the parapsychologist J. B. Rhine,
suggested dogs were potentially useful for mine clearance. Drawing on
literature from science studies and the emerging subdiscipline of
"animal studies," it is argued that cross-species intersubjectivity
played a significant role in determining these different positions. The
conceptual landscapes of Zuckerman and Rhine's disciplinary backgrounds
are shown to have produced distinct approaches to managing cross-species
relations, thus explaining how diverse opinions on minedog can coexist.
In conclusion, it is shown that the way one structures relationships
between humans and animals has profound impact on the knowledge and
labor subsequently produced, a process that cannot be separated from
ethical consequence.
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