4.3 Article

Rethinking Territory

Journal

ANTIPODE
Volume 42, Issue 5, Pages 1090-1118

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8330.2010.00795.x

Keywords

state spatiality; territory; territory-effect; network; region; value added

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Territory is the quintessential state space and appears to be of growing political importance. It is also a key concept in geography, but it has not been subject to as much critical attention as related geographical terms and remains under-theorised. Taking my cue from Timothy Mitchell's suggestion that the state should be understood as the effect of social practices, I argue that the phenomenon that we call territory is not an irreducible foundation of state power, let alone the expression of a biological imperative. Instead, territory too must be interpreted principally as an effect. This territory-effect can best be understood as the outcome of networked socio-technical practices. Thus, far from refuting or falsifying network theories of spatiality, the current resurgence of territory can be seen as itself a product of relational networks. Drawing on an empirical case study of the monitoring of regional economic performance through the measurement of gross value added (GVA), I show that territory and network are not, as is often assumed, incommensurable and rival principles of spatial organisation, but are intimately connected.

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