“…It continues to be asserted that we have entered a ‘drone age’ (Coley & Lockwood, 2016). Following the cementing of a now established literature on the ‘dronification’ of contemporary warfare (see, for example, Gregory, 2011; Parks & Kaplan, 2017; Williams, 2011), growing attention is paid to the more‐than‐military drone as it is ‘domesticated’ in increasingly varied contexts, spanning civil, commercial and recreational applications (see, for example, Crampton, 2016; Jackman, 2022; Jackman & Brickell, 2022; Kaplan & Miller, 2019; Klauser, 2022, 2022a; Klauser & Pedrozo, 2015, 2017). While scholars have critically traced the ‘ascendancy’ of the ‘good drone’ (Jumbert & Sandvik, 2017, p. 1), so too is further attention urged to the ‘complex ways in which civilian life is lived with, through and against the drone’ (Bradley & Cerella, 2019).…”