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Technoscientific imaging and the territorialization of ocean depth: Deep Sea Mining and the Politics of the “Common Heritage of Mankind”: Beyond a State-based Geopolitics

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Technoscientific imaging and the territorialization of ocean depth: Deep Sea Mining and the Politics of the “Common Heritage of Mankind”: Beyond a State-based Geopolitics. / Baptista, Joao; Neto, Pedro; Braverman, Irus et al.
In: Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, 16.12.2024.

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Baptista, J., Neto, P., Braverman, I., Steinberg, P., Palermo, G., Helmreich, S., Jue, M., & Childs, J. (2024). Technoscientific imaging and the territorialization of ocean depth: Deep Sea Mining and the Politics of the “Common Heritage of Mankind”: Beyond a State-based Geopolitics. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1177/23996544241302929

Vancouver

Baptista J, Neto P, Braverman I, Steinberg P, Palermo G, Helmreich S et al. Technoscientific imaging and the territorialization of ocean depth: Deep Sea Mining and the Politics of the “Common Heritage of Mankind”: Beyond a State-based Geopolitics. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space. 2024 Dec 16. Epub 2024 Dec 16. doi: 10.1177/23996544241302929

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Bibtex

@article{2bc773234262444aacb6699eaa96bbb6,
title = "Technoscientific imaging and the territorialization of ocean depth: Deep Sea Mining and the Politics of the “Common Heritage of Mankind”: Beyond a State-based Geopolitics",
abstract = "Once the last unclaimed solid expanse on Earth, the ocean floor has become one of the most contested spaces in contemporary geopolitics. The data-imagery produced by technoscience serves as the ultimate tool for nations asserting sovereignty in this territorial race. This symposium gathers diverse perspectives on the ongoing expansionist drive on the seabed, drawing inspiration from Abissal——a film-article featuring the Portuguese modern odyssey on the ocean floor that serves as the symposium{\textquoteright}s centerpiece. Aligned with modern ocean law, technoscience strives to render ocean depth visible to politics and territorializable for coastal states. However, the submerged prolongations and divisions it proffers are inherently political, as the images and knowledge it reveals are inseparable from the territorial regimes that commission them. Acting like an upward-facing mirror, the seabed divided by technoscience reflects humanity{\textquoteright}s expansionist thirst back to the surface. Yet the conquered depths do more than merely reflect this impulse; they also diffract the abyssal politics above. This symposium introduces a critical and creative conversation on the territorialization of the deep-sea and its far-reaching reverberations——both within and beyond ocean space.",
author = "Joao Baptista and Pedro Neto and Irus Braverman and Philip Steinberg and Gabriella Palermo and Stefan Helmreich and Melody Jue and John Childs",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "16",
doi = "10.1177/23996544241302929",
language = "English",
journal = "Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space",
publisher = "Sage",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Technoscientific imaging and the territorialization of ocean depth

T2 - Deep Sea Mining and the Politics of the “Common Heritage of Mankind”: Beyond a State-based Geopolitics

AU - Baptista, Joao

AU - Neto, Pedro

AU - Braverman, Irus

AU - Steinberg, Philip

AU - Palermo, Gabriella

AU - Helmreich, Stefan

AU - Jue, Melody

AU - Childs, John

PY - 2024/12/16

Y1 - 2024/12/16

N2 - Once the last unclaimed solid expanse on Earth, the ocean floor has become one of the most contested spaces in contemporary geopolitics. The data-imagery produced by technoscience serves as the ultimate tool for nations asserting sovereignty in this territorial race. This symposium gathers diverse perspectives on the ongoing expansionist drive on the seabed, drawing inspiration from Abissal——a film-article featuring the Portuguese modern odyssey on the ocean floor that serves as the symposium’s centerpiece. Aligned with modern ocean law, technoscience strives to render ocean depth visible to politics and territorializable for coastal states. However, the submerged prolongations and divisions it proffers are inherently political, as the images and knowledge it reveals are inseparable from the territorial regimes that commission them. Acting like an upward-facing mirror, the seabed divided by technoscience reflects humanity’s expansionist thirst back to the surface. Yet the conquered depths do more than merely reflect this impulse; they also diffract the abyssal politics above. This symposium introduces a critical and creative conversation on the territorialization of the deep-sea and its far-reaching reverberations——both within and beyond ocean space.

AB - Once the last unclaimed solid expanse on Earth, the ocean floor has become one of the most contested spaces in contemporary geopolitics. The data-imagery produced by technoscience serves as the ultimate tool for nations asserting sovereignty in this territorial race. This symposium gathers diverse perspectives on the ongoing expansionist drive on the seabed, drawing inspiration from Abissal——a film-article featuring the Portuguese modern odyssey on the ocean floor that serves as the symposium’s centerpiece. Aligned with modern ocean law, technoscience strives to render ocean depth visible to politics and territorializable for coastal states. However, the submerged prolongations and divisions it proffers are inherently political, as the images and knowledge it reveals are inseparable from the territorial regimes that commission them. Acting like an upward-facing mirror, the seabed divided by technoscience reflects humanity’s expansionist thirst back to the surface. Yet the conquered depths do more than merely reflect this impulse; they also diffract the abyssal politics above. This symposium introduces a critical and creative conversation on the territorialization of the deep-sea and its far-reaching reverberations——both within and beyond ocean space.

U2 - 10.1177/23996544241302929

DO - 10.1177/23996544241302929

M3 - Journal article

JO - Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space

JF - Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space

ER -