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Technology and the construction of oceanic space: Bathymetry and the Arctic continental shelf dispute
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Tel Aviv University, Gordon Faculty of Social Sciences, Tel Aviv University, P.O.B. 39040, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel;2. Sociology of Education, The Seymour Fox School of Education the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem, 9190501, Israel
Abstract:How did the Arctic seabed become a political space despite its almost complete inaccessibility to humans? While we can explain the causes of this in geopolitical and economic terms, theorizing the process is more difficult. This article argues that spatial constructions of the Arctic seabed emerge from the interaction among human actors, technologies, and the material environment. This interaction generates representations which are then fed into the overall process of spatializing the seabed. By highlighting the role of technology, this paper offers a way of relating human agency and materiality in the construction of oceanic space. The case study of bathymetry in the ongoing disputes over the Arctic continental shelf illustrates how technological and scientific advancements are embedded into global politics and themselves cause evolutions in the spatial construction of the seabed.
Keywords:Technology  Continental shelf  Seabed  Arctic  Space
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