TY - JOUR
T1 - Contested Spatialities of Digital Sovereignty
AU - Glasze, Georg
AU - Cattaruzza, Amaël
AU - Douzet, Frédérick
AU - Dammann, Finn
AU - Bertran, Marie-Gabrielle
AU - Bômont, Clotilde
AU - Braun, Matthias
AU - Danet, Didier
AU - Disforges, Alix
AU - Géry, Aude
AU - Grumbach, Stéphane
AU - Hummel, Patrik
AU - Limonier, Kevin
AU - Münßinger, Max
AU - Nicolai, Florian
AU - Pétiniaud, Louis
AU - Winkler, Jan
AU - Zanin, Caroline
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - “Digital sovereignty” has become a buzzword in digital policies. Contrary to the imaginary of digital transformation as preceding an era of limitless global networking in the 1990s, approaches to state regulation and delimitation of data flows as well as programmes for national digital infrastructures are justified with calls for digital sovereignty across very different contexts. This forum brings together contributions from political geography, law, computer science, and ethics that compare and analyse discourses and practices of digital sovereignty. The case studies on Russia and the EU reveal parallels as well as fundamental differences in the conception and implementation of digital sovereignty. Essays on the challenges posed by new forms of cross-border interaction (such as cloud computing) and new actors (such as digital platforms) illustrate that the traditional coupling of concepts of sovereignty, territoriality and the state, of jurisdiction and borders, must be rethought. The essays in this forum thus make it clear that the digital transformation is not simply a socio-technical modernisation process. It is rather shaped in specific ways and should be understood and analysed as (geo)-political discourses and practices. The forum contributes to the development of a political digital geography that analyses how the digital transformation is contested and produced in specific ways and unearths the politics and spatialities conceived and produced in these discourses and practices.
AB - “Digital sovereignty” has become a buzzword in digital policies. Contrary to the imaginary of digital transformation as preceding an era of limitless global networking in the 1990s, approaches to state regulation and delimitation of data flows as well as programmes for national digital infrastructures are justified with calls for digital sovereignty across very different contexts. This forum brings together contributions from political geography, law, computer science, and ethics that compare and analyse discourses and practices of digital sovereignty. The case studies on Russia and the EU reveal parallels as well as fundamental differences in the conception and implementation of digital sovereignty. Essays on the challenges posed by new forms of cross-border interaction (such as cloud computing) and new actors (such as digital platforms) illustrate that the traditional coupling of concepts of sovereignty, territoriality and the state, of jurisdiction and borders, must be rethought. The essays in this forum thus make it clear that the digital transformation is not simply a socio-technical modernisation process. It is rather shaped in specific ways and should be understood and analysed as (geo)-political discourses and practices. The forum contributes to the development of a political digital geography that analyses how the digital transformation is contested and produced in specific ways and unearths the politics and spatialities conceived and produced in these discourses and practices.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85126924386
U2 - 10.1080/14650045.2022.2050070
DO - 10.1080/14650045.2022.2050070
M3 - Article
SN - 1465-0045
VL - 28
SP - 919
EP - 958
JO - Geopolitics
JF - Geopolitics
IS - 2
ER -