This article pivots around the work of early modern legal scholar Hugo Grotius to consider the political stakes of ontological assessments of the sea and water in the context of Dutch imperialism. It draws on links with land reclamation projects in the Netherlands, while at the same time ties these to urgent questions within contemporary critical water and ocean studies around water, ontology, and race. Suggesting a rethinking of Grotius’s understanding of the ocean as perpetual res nullius – perpetually ownerless property – it destabilizes renditions of Grotius’s free sea as free from ownership. The ocean remains firmly within the orbit of property, the property of mankind, thereby excluding those considered non-human, including racialized...
This article examines Grotius' lifelong support for Dutch expansion overseas. As noted in other publ...
This article reconstructs Jacob van Heemskerck's second voyage to the East Indies and his capture of...
My analysis rests on the hypothesis that these dispossessed collectives articulated their identities...
This article pivots around the work of early modern legal scholar Hugo Grotius to consider the polit...
This essay traces the effect of literary quotation in Hugo Grotius’s Mare Liberum (The Free Sea) (16...
Until recently, most historians shared a prejudice in favour of the history of land, territory and t...
The nations of the world are now facing decisions of momentus importance to mankind's use of the oce...
The article opens with a brief look at evidence that in classical antiquity and the Middle Ages the ...
This article turns to the figure of the ship in the controversial Dutch Sinterklaas celebration to e...
This article reconstructs the voyage of the Swimming Lion to the Caribbean in 1595 and the court bat...
This paper introduces the term ‘terraqueous territoriality’ to analyse a particular relationship bet...
In December 1970, with no dissenting votes, the United Nations General Assembly declared that the re...
IR theory rests on territorial assumptions which shape our understanding of the nature of the state,...
This Article examines the ocean enclosure movement and its future viability in light of the signin...
Though its mission may seem to belong to the realm of science fiction-establishing self-sufficient, ...
This article examines Grotius' lifelong support for Dutch expansion overseas. As noted in other publ...
This article reconstructs Jacob van Heemskerck's second voyage to the East Indies and his capture of...
My analysis rests on the hypothesis that these dispossessed collectives articulated their identities...
This article pivots around the work of early modern legal scholar Hugo Grotius to consider the polit...
This essay traces the effect of literary quotation in Hugo Grotius’s Mare Liberum (The Free Sea) (16...
Until recently, most historians shared a prejudice in favour of the history of land, territory and t...
The nations of the world are now facing decisions of momentus importance to mankind's use of the oce...
The article opens with a brief look at evidence that in classical antiquity and the Middle Ages the ...
This article turns to the figure of the ship in the controversial Dutch Sinterklaas celebration to e...
This article reconstructs the voyage of the Swimming Lion to the Caribbean in 1595 and the court bat...
This paper introduces the term ‘terraqueous territoriality’ to analyse a particular relationship bet...
In December 1970, with no dissenting votes, the United Nations General Assembly declared that the re...
IR theory rests on territorial assumptions which shape our understanding of the nature of the state,...
This Article examines the ocean enclosure movement and its future viability in light of the signin...
Though its mission may seem to belong to the realm of science fiction-establishing self-sufficient, ...
This article examines Grotius' lifelong support for Dutch expansion overseas. As noted in other publ...
This article reconstructs Jacob van Heemskerck's second voyage to the East Indies and his capture of...
My analysis rests on the hypothesis that these dispossessed collectives articulated their identities...