This volume covers important ground in bringing the sea back into International Relations scholarship in a way that militates against a land/sea binary. In this concluding chapter we explore how this can productively be taken further through a lens of International Terraqueous Relations, which not only understands land and sea as connected, but also sees their interconnections as the condition of possibility -materially and symbolically – of the international itself. Specifically, we call for three dimensions to be further explored. First, we argue that the study of the sea has been connected, explicitly or implicitly, to a Western thalassodicy, a portrayal of the sea by which the West, and especially an Anglo-American West, rationalises an...
Abstract The paper argues that the norm of sovereignty was extended to sea areas with only minor ada...
This essay considers seawater as a substance and symbol in anthropological and social theory. Seawat...
This chapter brings central elements of the book to the fore, reflects the need for critical thinkin...
This volume covers important ground in bringing the sea back into International Relations scholarshi...
This paper adopts a materialist understanding of nature, suggesting the ‘malaise’ of the discipline ...
Human society has viewed marine space as an empty, deep and useless mass of water for most of its re...
The desire for territory has been a frequent cause of conflict. Latterly, a territorial integrity no...
In 1982 the USA and other major industrial states refused to sign the Convention on the Law of the S...
Seventy per cent of the Earth’s surface is sea. Yet, until recently social and cultural geographers ...
During the decolonization period, the order of the ocean changed as remarkably as that of land. Yet,...
This doctoral thesis was written in the period 2015–2019 at the University of British Columbia, Vanc...
The current phase of technological development and expansion in the world economy is leading to grea...
The Global Commons – the High Seas, Antarctica, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space – are resource domai...
This paper seeks to revisit this aspect of claims to archipelagic waters to consider the extent to w...
Traditionally, ocean is seen as the source of inspiration in the quest for truth that denies the the...
Abstract The paper argues that the norm of sovereignty was extended to sea areas with only minor ada...
This essay considers seawater as a substance and symbol in anthropological and social theory. Seawat...
This chapter brings central elements of the book to the fore, reflects the need for critical thinkin...
This volume covers important ground in bringing the sea back into International Relations scholarshi...
This paper adopts a materialist understanding of nature, suggesting the ‘malaise’ of the discipline ...
Human society has viewed marine space as an empty, deep and useless mass of water for most of its re...
The desire for territory has been a frequent cause of conflict. Latterly, a territorial integrity no...
In 1982 the USA and other major industrial states refused to sign the Convention on the Law of the S...
Seventy per cent of the Earth’s surface is sea. Yet, until recently social and cultural geographers ...
During the decolonization period, the order of the ocean changed as remarkably as that of land. Yet,...
This doctoral thesis was written in the period 2015–2019 at the University of British Columbia, Vanc...
The current phase of technological development and expansion in the world economy is leading to grea...
The Global Commons – the High Seas, Antarctica, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space – are resource domai...
This paper seeks to revisit this aspect of claims to archipelagic waters to consider the extent to w...
Traditionally, ocean is seen as the source of inspiration in the quest for truth that denies the the...
Abstract The paper argues that the norm of sovereignty was extended to sea areas with only minor ada...
This essay considers seawater as a substance and symbol in anthropological and social theory. Seawat...
This chapter brings central elements of the book to the fore, reflects the need for critical thinkin...