Writing Planetary Ethnographies
In: Political and legal anthropology review: PoLAR, Band 44, Heft 2
ISSN: 1555-2934
16 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Political and legal anthropology review: PoLAR, Band 44, Heft 2
ISSN: 1555-2934
In: Environment and society: advances in research, Band 11, Heft 1, S. 82-99
ISSN: 2150-6787
This review examines social science and practitioner literature regarding the relationship between ocean sciences big data projects and ocean governance. I contend that three overarching approaches to the study of the development of ocean sciences big data techne (the arts of data creation, management, and sharing) and data technologies can be discerned. The first approach traces histories of ocean sciences data technologies, highlighting the significant role of governments in their development. The second approach is comprised of an oceanic contribution to the study of ontological politics. The third takes a human-social centered approach, examining the networks of people and practices responsible for creating and maintaining ocean sciences big data infrastructure. The three approaches make possible a comparative reflection on the entangled ethical strands at work in the literature.
In: Studies in law, politics, and society, Band 55, S. 101-129
Indigenous-state relations in Chile are being reconfigured around a political rationality and productive logic of "calculative choice," through the government-run participatory development program Programa Origenes. Financed by the Chilean state and the Inter-American Development Bank, Origenes is broadly designed to address productive development, bilingual education, health care, and public services in rural indigenous communities. The technologies of Origenes include participatory planning, planning tables, and audit. I argue that bureaucrats and indigenous peoples who participate are subjected to subject-making technologies that are integral to a rationalizing and transformative neoliberal assemblage of legal and policy instruments and practices. [Copyright Elsevier Ltd.]
In: Studies in Law, Politics, and Society; Studies in Law, Politics and Society, S. 101-129
In: Political and legal anthropology review: PoLAR, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 44-65
ISSN: 1555-2934
Many forms of sovereignty are still, albeit not exclusively, anchored in claims on territory and are asserted through the productive exercise of control over people, resources, and habitats located within the spaces of territory. In British Columbia, Canada, First Nations' assertions of sovereign control over their territories and resources are reconfiguring resource planning, development, and management, even as the provincial and federal governments seek to maintain their own control over the same territory. While the courts have been the primary avenue for protecting Aboriginal Title and rights, First Nations are also turning to the use of mass media and other public forums. This essay examines the assertions of sovereignty made by coastal First Nations through the venues of public forums.
In: Political and legal anthropology review: PoLAR, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 1-22
ISSN: 1555-2934
In: Stanford journal of international law, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 1-2
ISSN: 0731-5082
In: University casebook series
In: University casebook series
In: University casebook series
In: University casebook series
In: Studies in law, politics, and society, Band 55, S. 3-17
Keal argues that Europeans began formulating their modern system of international laws in conjunction with their colonial projects in the early 1500s. The colonial projects gave rise to several key legal debates regarding: (1) European claims on territories in what we now know as the Americas, and (2) proper conduct of relationships of conquest between indigenous peoples and Europeans (Keal, 2003, pp. 84-87). Initially, competing territorial claims between Spanish and Portuguese interests were settled through a series of Papal Bulls that gave Spain a larger share of Central and South America. The Dutch, English, and French pursued their interests through military and mercantilist means, reconfiguring Spain's initial hold on the majority of the Central and South America (Burkholder & Johnson, 2010). [Copyright Elsevier Ltd.]
In: Studies in Law, Politics, and Society; Studies in Law, Politics and Society, S. 3-17
In: Perspectives on political science, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 125
ISSN: 1045-7097