Print

Print


For those who work at the intersection of nature and technology or urban
life and technology, we have a couple spots left in two of the Robotic
Futures sessions. We have a great line up of papers for the 4-part session
and would love to round out the nature and urban life sessions.


Please send abstracts by October 27th.


*ROBOTIC FUTURES*

*Call For Papers*

*AAG 2017 Boston (April 5-8, 2017)*



This Call for Papers seeks to organize four independent but related
sessions on the examination of robotic futures across the discipline of
geography. Each session has an organizer to which contributors are
encouraged to send prospective papers.



*Please send paper titles and abstracts (250 words) to the appropriate
corresponding session organizer(s) by October 27, 2016 (see below for
details):*

·
*Robotic Futures I: Nature/Environment & Technology: *Lily House-Peters (
[log in to unmask])

Discussant: Jessica Lehman (University of Minnesota)

·
*Robotic Futures II: Urban Life & Technological Sovereignties: *Casey Lynch
([log in to unmask])

*Robotic Futures Sessions Summary*

Recently, geographers have taken up the question of robots and robotic
technologies within the confines of a broadly engaged human and
environmental geography. From the rise of robotic warfare to the
development of smart cities and borders to the reliance on code, big data
analytics, and autonomous sensing systems in environmental management,
geographers are interrogating what robots and robotic technologies mean not
only for discipline, surveillance, and security, but for making and
remaking everyday life and the socio-natural environment.



This call seeks papers organized around a series of four sessions focused
on a number of key empirical nodal points through which geographers might
further investigate the central proposition:



*What does the growing integration of robots and robotic technologies into
everyday life do and/or mean for the theorization of sociospatial relations*?




The four themed sessions will conclude with a fifth session consisting of a
panel discussion of the session organizers to examine the broader questions
and overlapping concerns related to reorganizations in social, political,
and environmental relations and the interventions that robots and robotic
technologies are playing today.



*1. Robotic Futures I: Nature/Environment & Technology *(Organizer: Lily
House-Peters)

 Advances in technology and robotic system design are targeting the
environment producing new encounters with and understandings of nature. For
example, environmental monitoring is increasingly carried out via
UAVs/drones, autonomous sensor networks, and mobile robotic platforms.  The
ability of these systems to collect and wirelessly transmit data at
continuous time scales, reach remote locations, and carry out panoramic
measurements is shifting the temporal and spatial dimensions of
environmental perception. Analysis of big data sets and ever-growing
emphasis on models and algorithms transform not only how we know nature,
but also the types of discursive formations that emerge and the kinds of
interventions that become possible. Yet, attention in the geographical
literature to these processes remains extremely limited. The focus of this
session is to examine and attempt to theorize how the rise of robots (ie.
drones, sensor networks, autonomous monitoring platforms) and robotic
technologies (ie. computer code, algorithms, big data, models) are
reorganizing ways of knowing, seeing, and talking about nature and the
environment. This session seeks papers that engage with the following broad
questions: *How does the virtual world of autonomous sensor readings,
computer code, algorithms, and models make and remake the material
dimensions of nature? And vice versa, how do the material dimensions of
nature serve to challenge robot(ic) logics? How are robotic technologies
reorganizing the spatial and temporal dimensions of our perceptions of
nature and the environment? What are the discursive shifts taking place as
a result of the increased reliance on robots and robotics in environmental
monitoring and how are these affecting decision-making, interventions, and
the production of nature?*


*2. Robotic Futures III: Urban Life & Technological Sovereignties *(Organizer:
Casey Lynch)

Innovations in robotic and information and communication technology (ICT)
are increasingly impacting practices of urban planning, management, and
politics. “Smart city” programs and the “internet of things” have allowed
for the proliferation of a variety of sensors and other miniaturized
computing technologies throughout the urban form, producing massive amounts
of urban data to be stored, processed and exploited by municipal
governments, private corporations, and other entities. In some cities,
these developments are increasingly giving rise to oppositional movements
interested in rearticulating the role of emerging technologies in urban
life. For instance, competing discourses within a fledgling “technological
sovereignty” movement in Europe seek to challenge “technological
fetishism.” Borrowing from theorizations of “food sovereignty,” the idea of
technological sovereignty calls for a critical analysis and radical
restructuring of the existing political economic models through which
technology is developed, produced, and controlled. This session seeks
papers that: *employ critical approaches to the role of emerging robotic
technology and ICT in urban life; examine the work of urban actors or
collectives that critically reconceptualize the potential role of
technology in creating alternative urban economies or political framework;
offer new ways of methodologically approaching or theorizing the role of
technical objects in complex urban assemblage; critically explore the
notion of “technological sovereignty” as a theoretical concept and/or
political project; and/or consider questions of privacy, surveillance, or
data security within the urban context.*


*3. Robotic Futures II: Algorithmic Subjectivities *(Organizers: Vincent
Del Casino & Jeremy Crampton)

Robots are often imagined as material objects with bodies and form. Robots
are also invoked in software, code, and algorithms. This is not to suggest
an either/or ontology of robots but a both/and whereby geographers think
about the theoretical and political implications of the hardware/software
matrix and what it means for human and more-than-human bodies and
relations. Picking up on the themes of assemblage theory and other theories
of power and performance, this session seeks papers that empirically and
theoretically interrogate robotic futures, human cyborg relations, and
other robotic possibilities. Key questions to be addressed in this session
include: *How are more decisions being taken by algorithmic objects in
fields across education, insurance, policing, and health? * *What are the
attendant anxieties around algorithms and their failures, gaps or
uncertainties?* *Can we identify algorithmic spaces that expand our notion
of robotic capabilities? **What sorts of human and nonhuman subjectivities
are made possible and/or closed off by the emergence of new robots and
robotic technologies? How might we theorize robots in the context of our
historically anthropocentric human geographies? And, what role might robots
play in our understanding of the spatialities of key concepts in human
geography, including labor and labor politics, health and health care, or
geospatial technologies and relations of power, to name a few?*


*4.** Robotics Futures IV: **The Politics of Security *(Organizer: Ian Shaw)

This session seeks to explore how robots are transforming the spaces,
politics, and subjects of security. Robotics are already emerging as vital
actors in our security-worlds. From biometric borders, automated gun
turrets, to mobile sea mines, a new class of robotic apparatuses are being
developed, each of which embodies (and mobilizes) a future geography. The
rise of U.S. drone warfare has received a great deal of media and academic
discussion. Yet, paradoxically, this has tended to mask the wider robotic
revolution in security: the banal and *everyday* deployment of robots by
state and non-state actors. Accordingly, this session aims to consider a
number of broad theoretical and empirical questions on the politics of
security: *How will robots transform the spaces of war and conflict? In
what ways will robots transform the spaces and architectures of policing?
How will robots transform the established logics of state sovereignty and
governance? What potentials are there for resistance and subversion?*

-- 
Lily House-Peters, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Department of Geography
Resilience Commitment Coordinator, Office of Sustainability & Planning
California State University, Long Beach

Office: PH1-224
Tel: (562) 985-1889
Email: [log in to unmask]
http://www.cla.csulb.edu/departments/geography/faculty/lily-house-peters/

Personal Website: https://lilyhousepetersgeographer.wordpress.com/