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The Geopolitics of Measurement

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The Geopolitics of Measurement. Measurement is often taken for granted ... importance to geopolitics. ... Virtual objects and the geopolitics of capitalism ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Geopolitics of Measurement


1
The Geopolitics of Measurement
2
  • Measurement is often taken for granted
  • Measurements are taken, then analysis is
    possible....

3
  • 1
  • Measuring does not merely describe or represent
    what objects or processes are...
  • ....it creates new objects, transforming reality
  • See I Hacking, Representing and Intervening, CUP
    (1983), I Stengers, Power and Invention,
    Minnesota, B Latour, Pandoras Hope, Harvard
    (1999)

4
  • 2
  • The development of forms and systems of
    measurement are closely related to the
    development of politics and government
  • see e.g. P Miller and N Rose, Governing the
    Present, Polity 2008

5
  • 3
  • The development of systems of measurement
    creates new (political) spaces...
  • or Metrological zones
  • see A Barry, Technological Zones, European
    Journal of Social Theory, 9, 2, 239-253

6
  • 4
  • Measurement is of critical importance to
    geopolitics..
  • It has geopolitical and economic
    consequences.....

7
  • 3 cases
  • The metre and the French revolution
  • Air quality on the High Street and the European
    Union
  • The oil barrel and the geopolitics of capitalism

8
1. The metre (1790)
9
a. Standardisation
  • Ce nest pas le , mais les systèmes de
    mesure et cest bien là le problème. Chaque
    région de France possède son propre système
    each region of France possesses its own system
    en Bretagne, on mesure en perches, à Marseille en
    palmes, à Paris en pieds ailleurs encore en
    toises, en pouces, en lignes, en brasses, en
    coudées, en empans, Il en est de même pour les
    mesures de masse où la livre est par exemple plus
    légère à Toulouse quà Strasbourg !!! the pound
    is lighter in Toulouse than Strasbourg
  • See K Alder, Engineering the Revolution, 1997
    M Norton Wise (ed) The Values of Precision, 1995

10
But....
  • Resistance to metrication in France (and later
    the UK)...
  • A standardised measure based on nature (on a
    fraction of the earths meridian) rather than on
    human/cultural dimensions (the length of an arm,
    the size of a bottle)

11
  • Progressive extension of the application of
    metric measurement (metrological zone) to
    create a unified and standardised space (the
    nation state)

12
2. Air Quality (December 1952)
13
Air quality monitoring networks
  • E.g The London air quality network, Oxford air
    watch, national network
  • Automatic and semi-automatic
  • SOx, NOx, PM10, O3....
  • See http//www.oxford-airwatch.aeat.co.uk/

14
Sites of measurement....
  • Measures points
  • Pollution can vary considerably with location
  • not the same as human exposure (High St what
    about Longwall St!)
  • Abstraction (from the complexity of the site) and
    the creation of a new object (air quality)
    which has effects

15
  • Linked to targets....(and therefore actions by
    local authorities).. following National air
    quality strategy (1997) leads to action at a
    distance e.g. less polluting buses, pedestrian
    zones
  • Public information but what does it mean? a
    reassuring realism (Myerson and Rydin) of
    environmental information expected to affect
    individual behaviour but how?
  • On action at a distance see Bruno Latour, Science
    in Action, 1987

16
A European space of measurement?
  • Different standards methods in different
    states...
  • measurements in different states are comparable
    but different..
  • Europe is a harmonised but not standardised
    metrological zone a network of measuring
    devices

17
3. Peak Oil (2008)
18
Peak oil
  • - Predictions of when oil will start to run out
    based on calculations of proven reserves

19
Oil Reserves
  • But...
  • Oil companies only routinely quote proven
    reserves
  • BP has cut 2.4pc off its proven reserves,
    becoming the latest oil and gas company to
    announce a significant revision of its asset
    holdings.
  • The news follows Shell's shock statement in
    January that it had overestimated its proven
    reserves of oil and gas by 20pc, or 3.9billion
    barrels
  • Daily Telegraph, 1 February 2009

20
  • ..and proven oil reserves are not physical
    objects!
  • Accounts of proven reserves represent what a
    company knows that it can economically produce
    given current technology and current prices....

21
  • ...implies that proven reserves can fall as the
    price falls...
  • ....and rise as a given oil field is
    progressively used up (as the company knows more
    precisely how much it can produce)
  • ...

22
Virtual objects and the geopolitics of capitalism
  • Proven oil reserves are not physical objects
    but economic relations
  • Knowledge of proven oil reserves in major
    territories e.g. Iraq, Saudi Arabia is limited
    or inaccurate anyway...

23
Conclusions
  • there is a political geography to measurement
  • measurement does not just represent the world
    it transforms it and adds to it
  • there are clear links between forms of
    measurement and the organisation of political and
    economic space (nation-states, transnational
    political organisations, multinational
    capital).....
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