Abstract
There is much concern in the social sciences and humanities today about how people are connected with and responsible to those who live in distant places. Recent examples are abundant: from climate change to the cyclone that hit Burma in 2008. At the same time, new forces and personalities in the social sciences and humanities are seeking to 'open out' understandings of 'the spatial' as a concept. There is a movement to view 'space' as something which is more than a pre-defined container of territorial politics; instead, as often the sphere of multiplicity, difference, affect and/or post-territorial interconnections. This brief paper talks about the "Space of Democracy and the Democracy of Space" global network, which seeks to explore how these new forces of interrogation into the spatial, materiality, political and ethical connectivity are having an influence upon how people perceive of and constitute new spaces of politics and democracy today.
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CITATION STYLE
Pugh, J. (2009). The spaces of democracy and the democracy of space: A new network exploring the disciplinary effects of the spatial turn. Space and Polity, 13(2), 159–164. https://doi.org/10.1080/13562570902999825
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