25 research outputs found
Normalising jurisdictional heterotopias through place branding : the cases of Christiania and Metelkova
This paper explores the political dimensions of place branding as a path to normalisation for areas where
a paradoxical relationship with the law exists, places that we coin âjurisdictional heterotopiasâ borrowing
from Foucauldian literature. We posit that place branding plays a fundamental role in facilitating scale
jumping in the otherwise vertically aligned legal space, a hierarchy designed to exclude spatial
multiplicity from its premise. By examining the role of place branding in such areas, we endeavour to
understand and appreciate the selective application of the law, the perpetuation of unregulated and illegal
activity, as well as the place â specificity of legal practice. Ultimately, we argue that strong place
branding associations permit the engulfment of this type of heterotopias in the âmainstreamâ leading to
their normalisation; such a normalisation results not only in the acceptance of their uniqueness by the
institutional elements, but also in the potential nullification of the liberties their communities advocate
Beyond the money shot; or how framing nature matters? Locating 'Green' at Wildscreen
Natural history films use technological mediations to frame aspects of nature so as to communicate information, in part through engendering particular viewer affects. As an entertainment industry embedded in capitalist social relations and concerned with competition for finance and ratings, natural history film-making is also a search for âthe money shotâ â associated with extremes including rarity, sensational behavior, and otherwise un(fore)seen views. I highlight this sensationalizing impetus through ethnographic fieldwork conducted at the biannual UK Wildscreen film festival in 2010. Here, wildlife films were frequently presented as action dramas with a rhythm of anticipation, climax and satisfaction. I argue that, through stimulating significantly disconnective affects, such framing may work against composition of a caring ecocultural ethics that entwines human with more-than-human natures and futures; and that this tendency parallels the similarly disconnecting effects documented for pornographic film. In contrast, I engage with the differently constructive frames guiding the low budget, open access, activist film Green, which, perhaps paradoxically given the thrust of much of the natural history film industry, won the prestigious WWF Gold Panda Award at Wildscreen 2010. I follow framing theorist George Lakoff to emphasize that since cognition is both embodied and embedded in diverse inter-relationships, affective registers generating mimetic connection are as significant in communicating information regarding âthe environmentâ as the text and words by which nature might be framed. I conclude that attention to affective registers and embodied (dis)connections in natural history film may enhance a turning of capitalist spectacle against itself, so as to work more effectively in service to the composition of abundant socionatural futures
Law\u27s Underdog: A Call for Nonhuman Legalities
Questions pertaining to the role of nonhumans in law shed light on some of the most fundamental assumptions and constructions of contemporary modern law. I start by reviewing the traditions of animal welfare and animal rights in legal studies and by discussing the constitutional frameworks that contend with the animal. Then, I move beyond the individual-based discourse of much existing animal law to contemplate ecological traditions that consider nonhuman populations and species as well as land ethics and ecosystem management. Next, I review the rich literature that has emerged in the last two decades in critical theory, mainly posthumanism and its subtraditions of animal geographies and multispecies ethnography. Finally, I sketch visions of more-than-human legalities that push beyond the limitations of existing (neo)liberal legal traditions, pausing to consider what ocean, or blue, legalities might look like. Throughout, I argue that we need to move toward a dynamic and pluralistic approach that acknowledges the myriad ways of being in the world, their significance to law, and, in turn, law\u27s significance to these other modes of existence
Reconstructing scale: towards a new scalar politics
In recent years, the dominant political-economic approach to scale has been subject to critique from poststructuralist perspectives. In this paper, I argue that the charge of âreificationâ has been accepted too readily, masking areas of conceptual overlap between political-economic and poststructural approaches, particularly in terms of their shared concern with the construction of scale. On this basis, I propose to replace the established concept of âthe politics of scaleâ with âscalar politicsâ, arguing that it is often not scale per se that is the prime object of contention, but rather specific processes and institutionalized practices that are themselves differentially scaled