Already in Land und Meer, Carl Schmitt set out the hypothesis where
contemporaneity itself produces a second “spatial revolution” after the one
marked by the conquest of the oceans between the 16th and 17th centuries. The
introduction of the air element into the modern contraposition between land and
sea would provoke a geopolitical as well as existential shift. Land is, in
fact, the only surface on where it is possible to draw and defend a clearly
defined border and thus is the only place by definition where territory can
transform itself into a meaningful social and political community.
Local, interregional and trans-border socioeconomic mobility,
communication technologies, global markets, new technologies and the “cyber”
dimension, all impose a continental dimension to some processes of government
in such a way that augments the porosity of territorial confines which in turn
become increasingly more fluid in the same way as the identities crossing them.
Looking at globalization from an exclusively global perspective can
nurture the feeling of “disorientation” in the face of the porosity of borders
and the remodulation of the relationship between inclusion and exclusion within
modern sovereignty. It is not by chance that the so-called “sovereignist”
political forces around the world are claiming the power of decision against
supra-state entities and, more generally, are in opposition to every form of
power external to national borders (and thus able to plunge the Westphalian
triad of political power, population and territory into a state of crisis),
while the rhetoric of populist voices from both the left and right crash
against those who represent the “global élite”.
The geopolitical outlook further complicates the scene by way of its
point of view which focusses on the concept of “strategic interest”. What is
the strategic interest of a country or a population and how does it change in
the face the interdependence between states in the world order as we know it
today? How is the geopolitical outlook and supra-state structuring of the world
order organized between them? What relationship is there between the first and
the crisis being felt by the second? Can we possibly find a synthesis of the
conflict between land, sea and air? A glocal perspective could help in
responding to these and other questions.
Deadline: January 31, 2020.
This issue is scheduled to appear at end-March 2020.
Glocalism, a peer-reviewed, open-access and cross-disciplinary journal,
is currently accepting manuscripts for publication. We welcome studies in any
field, with or without comparative approach, that address both practical
effects and theoretical import.
All articles should be sent to: davide.cadeddu@unimi.it
Articles can be in any language and length chosen by the author, while
its abstract and keywords have to be in English.
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