The Institutional Production of Territory: State Expansion in a “Nationalist” Age I
Type: Virtual Paper
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Start / End Time: 4/7/2021 11:10 AM (Pacific Time (US & Canada)) - 4/7/2021 12:25 PM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Room: Virtual 31
Organizer(s):
Shaina Potts
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Chairs: Shaina Potts
Agenda
Role | Participant |
Presenter | Guanchi Zhang |
Presenter | ERAY ÇAYLI London School of Economics |
Presenter | Simonetta Armondi Politecnico di Milano |
Presenter | Albert Orta-Mascaro |
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Presentation(s), if applicable
Guanchi Zhang, Harvard University; Local Practice in National Territorial Reform: Reexamining the Long-Term Development of State Space in China |
ERAY ÇAYLI, ; State-endorsed violence, infrastructure, and activist-expertise in Turkey's Kurdistan |
Simonetta Armondi, Politecnico di Milano; Changing Geographies of the State in Italy: A Research Agenda? |
Albert Orta-Mascaro, No Affiliation ; Exploring the role of municipal governments as territorial actors |
Description
Amidst the proliferation of nationalist discourses making simplistic claims about state sovereignty, in practice, state spatiality is increasingly trans-national, subterranean, aquatic, non-contiguous and/or extraterrestrial. Building on our previous work on financialization and frontiers, in this session we refocus our gaze on the state to engage its violent and virulent resurgence as an imperial actor in contemporary times. We are particularly interested in the flexible institutional forms through which states, in collusion with “non-state” entities, broadly defined, produce state territorialities within and beyond official political borders.
By focusing on territoriality, we foreground practices of material expansion, land use change, and state building. We envision this, however, in an open way that includes not only explicit physical expansion, but also how institutional, legal, financial and discursive practices underwrite claims to resources of all kinds. What are the specific institutional mechanisms through which powerful actors produce claims to control over space and resources? How do liberal discourses, e.g. about law, economy and politics, shape the production of state space? What are the selective practices of rule-making, rule-breaking, and interpretation used to legitimate claims to territory? What are the roles of institutions, experts and technopolitical discourses in advancing expansionary territorial agendas in a nominally post-imperialist age? And how does attending to such concrete mechanisms help us disaggregate the state, even as we keep state power at the center of our analysis? Throughout, we are interested in probing the distinct logics at work in diverse territorializing processes, from privatization, to national security, to accumulation, to sovereignty.
The Institutional Production of Territory: State Expansion in a “Nationalist” Age I
Description
Virtual Paper
Session starts at 4/7/2021 11:10 AM (Pacific Time (US & Canada))
Contact the Primary Organizer
Shaina Potts - spotts@geog.ucla.edu