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Reworking the political in digital forests: The cosmopolitics of socio-technical worlds

cam.depositDate2022-07-18
cam.issuedOnline2022-08-12
cam.orpheus.counter4
cam.orpheus.successMon Aug 29 08:26:39 BST 2022 - Embargo updated
dc.contributor.authorGabrys, Jennifer
dc.contributor.authorWesterlaken, Michelle
dc.contributor.authorUrzedo, Danilo
dc.contributor.authorRitts, Max
dc.contributor.authorSimlai, Trishant
dc.contributor.orcidGabrys, Jennifer [0000-0001-5545-2459]
dc.date.accessioned2022-07-19T23:30:44Z
dc.date.available2022-07-19T23:30:44Z
dc.date.issued2022-12
dc.date.updated2022-07-18T16:13:55Z
dc.description.abstract<jats:p> Forests are increasingly central to policies and initiatives to address global environmental change. Digital technologies have become crucial components of these projects as the tools and systems that would monitor and manage forests for storing carbon, preserving biodiversity, and providing ecosystem services. Historically, technologies have been instrumental in forming forests as spaces of conservation, extraction, and inhabitation. Digital technologies build on previous techniques of forest management, which have been shaped by colonial governance, expert science, and economic growth. However, digital technologies for achieving environmental initiatives can also extend, transform, and disrupt these sedimented practices. This article asks how the convergence of forests and digital technologies gives rise to different socio-technical formations and modalities of “political forests.” Through an analysis of five digital operations, including 1) observation, 2) datafication, 3) participation, 4) automation, and 5) regulation and transformation, we investigate how the co-constitution of forests, technologies, subjects, and social life creates distinct materializations of politics–and cosmopolitics. By building on and expanding the concept of cosmopolitics, we query how the political is designated through digital forest projects and how it might be reworked to generate less extractive environmental practices and relations while contributing to more just and pluralistic forest worlds. </jats:p>
dc.description.sponsorshipERC 866006
dc.identifier.doi10.17863/CAM.86701
dc.identifier.eissn2753-9687
dc.identifier.issn2753-9687
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/339293
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherSAGE Publications
dc.publisher.departmentDepartment of Sociology
dc.publisher.urlhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1177/27539687221117836
dc.rightsAll Rights Reserved
dc.rights.urihttp://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
dc.subject30 Agricultural, Veterinary and Food Sciences
dc.subject3007 Forestry Sciences
dc.subject44 Human Society
dc.subject15 Life on Land
dc.titleReworking the political in digital forests: The cosmopolitics of socio-technical worlds
dc.typeArticle
dcterms.dateAccepted2022-07-18
prism.publicationNameProgress in Environmental Geography
pubs.funder-project-idEuropean Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) ERC (866006)
pubs.licence-display-nameApollo Repository Deposit Licence Agreement
pubs.licence-identifierapollo-deposit-licence-2-1
rioxxterms.typeJournal Article/Review
rioxxterms.versionAM
rioxxterms.versionofrecord10.1177/27539687221117836

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