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New Article: A New Earth Rises

Erik Isberg, PhD-student at the division within the SPHERE-project, has published a new article with the title “A new Earth rises. How did the planet replace the nation-state to become the prime political object of the 21st century?”.

Profile picture of Erik Isberg

You can read and even listen to the full text on the Aeon-Website. Here is a small extract from Erik’s piece:

The recently resurfaced planet, I argue, can be traced back to fantasies like Richardson’s. Contemporary planetary governance relies on a specific trajectory of planetary monitoring. Even though efforts to map and measure global space have a far longer history – not least as a primary vehicle of Western colonialism and imperialism – the efforts to monitor and govern planetary dynamics have also relied on a particular history of knowing, seeing and measuring the planet. Thinking of the planet as an interconnected system required quantified and centralised approaches as well as a wide set of scientific instruments and technologies. A specific kind of planet was able to emerge, not by itself, but through the interconnected histories of geopolitics, technology and grand visions of planetary monitoring.

Article by Andrew F. Johnson and Susanna Lidström in Nature Ecology & Evolution

Ecological concepts and their acronyms can obstruct understanding of complexity by providing seemingly simple and certain descriptions of the natural world. Their use requires a balanced approach.

Our researcher Susanna Lidström, currently positioned in Scripps San Diego, recently got published in Nature Ecology & Evolution together with Andrew F Johnson. Follow this link for open access article: The balance between concepts and complexity in ecology | Nature Ecology & Evolution