Territory, globalization and international relations : the cartographic reality of space /
Jeppe Strandsbjerg.
- Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.
- x, 183 p. : maps ; 23 cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-175) and index.
Introduction --- The State of Territory --- Reclaiming a Spatial Reality --- The Cartographic Foundation of Territory --- The Cartographic Formation of a Global World --- The Cartographic Formation of Denmark --- Conclusion.
This book addresses one of the core concepts across the social sciences: territory. Social theory has struggled to conceptualize territorial space in the nexus between the 'state' and 'global change'. This innovative book argues that the discussion of territorial change remains trapped within a dual tension between subjectivist and objectivist accounts of space, and a flawed dichotomy between global and territorial space. In order to address these problems, this book analyzes the history of cartography as a way to understand the nature of modern political space. From the 15th to the 17th century European cartography underwent a transformation establishing a new reality of space that conditioned the possibility of developing centralised sovereign territorial states within a unified global framework. This so-called modern cartography produced space as an autonomous sphere based on abstract mathematical principles. To understand the relationship between territory and globalisation we have to understand that both depend on a cartographic reality of space. This has profound implications for our understanding of political identity, changes associated with globalization, and explains why state territory has proven such a persistent dimension in global politics. -- Back cover.
9780230580831 (hardback) 0230580831 (hardback)
2010027563
GBB075098 bnb
015583248 Uk
Human territoriality--Political aspects. Geopolitics. International relations.