We are happy to invite you to our 4th talk of the Vienna STS Talk Series in 2024W:
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FutureSpace Talks by Julie Michelle Klinger
Department of Geography & Spatial Sciences, University of Delaware
October 24, 2024, 04:00 PM-05:00 PM
Extractive Labor in Extraglobal Geographies.
You can register for the talk
here<https://futurespace-project.eu/futurespace-talk-registration/>
Abstract
Contemporary space activities rely on hardware, and hardware is comprised of minerals,
metals, and materials wrested from the Earth by human labor. This embeds the extraglobal
geographies in extractive supply chains and labour regimes on Earth, and shapes the manner
in which the immensity of the cosmos is understood and engaged by diverse publics. Drawing
on several examples from around the world, this talk presents a conceptual architecture
for centering the politics of labor and land use in outer space geographies, while also
reflexively examining the potential epistemic violence of using extractivism as a spatial
analytic to link Earthly and outer space geographies.
Biography
Dr. Julie Michelle Klinger (she/her) is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Geography and Spatial Sciences at the University of Delaware, and a member of the
International Standards Organization Technical Advisory Group 298: Rare Earth Supply Chain
Transparency and Traceability. Dr. Klinger and her research team are supported by the
National Science Foundation, The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and the Ford Foundation to
conduct grounded yet global-scope research on competing uses for energy-transition metals,
materials, and infrastructures. She has published numerous articles on rare earth
elements, natural resource use, environmental politics, and outer space, including the
award-winning 2018 book Rare Earth Frontiers: From Terrestrial Subsoils to Lunar
Landscapes. She holds a PhD in Geography from the University of California, Berkeley.
Organiser
Nina Klimburg-Witjes, Assist. Prof. STS Dep Vienna / PI "FutureSpace" &
Joseph Popper (Postdoc Researcher, STS Dep Vienna / FutureSpace)
Location
online via
zoom<https://univienna.zoom.us/j/63251489007?pwd=FBTgiIoQbHPTvmHhnjFwObba9mAGqZ.1>
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Best wishes,
Katrin Hackl
_____________
Mag. Katrin Hackl
Research Support & Communication
Department of Science and Technology Studies
University of Vienna
Universitätsstraße 7 /II/ 6th floor (NIG)
1010 Vienna / Austria
Tel.: 0043-1-4277-496007
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