数字图瓦卢:气候损失世界中的国家主权

IF 3.9 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Delf Rothe, Ingrid Boas, Carol Farbotko, Taukiei Kitara
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在一段广为传播的视频中,图瓦卢岛国政府提出了在气候变化有增无减的情况下图瓦卢作为数字国家的想象。在本文中,我们以 "数字图瓦卢 "为范例,推进人类世国际关系的讨论,展示气候灾难和数字国家形成的过程是如何并置的。我们将气候损失和国家消亡与虚拟主权和网络国家的概念联系起来,关注大型信息和通信技术公司的基础设施力量,同时承认图瓦卢国家在应对人类世挑战中的作用。我们讨论了一个虚拟的非领土国家如何调动图瓦卢土著哲学 "fenua",在对领土和主权的关系理解中将土地、海洋、人民和文化联系起来。数字图瓦卢以这种方式设想新兴数字技术在虚拟空间中重建图瓦卢的fenua,从而在面临生存性气候威胁时重新获得能动性。我们认为,这预示着一种全新的、高度关系性的数字国家保护模式,对人类世的国际关系具有深远影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Digital Tuvalu: state sovereignty in a world of climate loss
In a widely shared video, the government of the island state of Tuvalu posed an imaginary of Tuvalu as a digital nation in a situation of unabated climate change. In this article, we take the example of Digital Tuvalu as a paradigmatic case to advance the debates on international relations in the Anthropocene, demonstrating how the processes of climate catastrophe and digital state formation juxtapose. In linking climate loss and state extinction to notions of virtual sovereignty and cyber statehood, we are attentive to the infrastructural power of large information and communications technology companies, while at the same time acknowledging the agency of the Tuvaluan state in navigating the challenges of the Anthropocene. We discuss how a virtual deterritorial state mobilizes the Tuvaluan indigenous philosophy of fenua, to link land, sea, people and culture in a relational understanding of territory and sovereignty. Digital Tuvalu in this way envisions emerging digital technologies to rebuild Tuvaluan fenua in virtual space, thereby regaining agency in the face of existential climate threats. This, we argue, signals a new and highly relational model of digital state preservation, having profound implications for international relations in the Anthropocene.
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来源期刊
International Affairs
International Affairs INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
24.40%
发文量
255
期刊介绍: International Affairs is Britain"s leading journal of international relations. Founded by and edited at Chatham House, the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London, it has not only developed a much valued insight into European policy debates but has also become renowned for its coverage of global policy issues. Mixing commissioned and unsolicited articles from the biggest names in international relations this lively, provocative journal will keep you up-to-date with critical thinking on the key issues shaping world economic and political change.
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