•  11
    This chapter thinks through international law and posthuman theory by way of practice of ‘posthumanist commoning’. It explores the posthumanist and the commoning dimensions of particular legal and political collective actions at hand. It does so by telling the story of the ‘insurgent lake’ of Rome - the ‘lago bullicante’. Bullicante is an archaic Italian term that signifies both ‘to boil’ (bollire) and ‘to get agitated’ (agitarsi). The ‘lake that boils and gets agitated’ refers to the artificial…Read more
  •  76
    On phantom publics, clusters, and collectives: be(com)ing subject in algorithmic times
    with Dimitri Van Den Meerssche
    AI and Society 1-18. forthcoming.
    This article starts from the observation that practices of ‘algorithmic governmentality’ or ‘governance by data’ are reconfiguring modes of social relationality and collectivity. By building, first, on an empirical exploration of digital bordering practices, we qualify these emergent algorithmic categories as ‘clusters’—pulsing patterns distilled from disaggregated data. As fluid, modular, and ever-emergent forms of association, these ‘clusters’ defy stable expressions of collective representati…Read more
  •  40
    Tech-based Prototypes in Climate Governance: On Scalability, Replicability, and Representation
    with Andrea Leiter
    Law and Critique 33 (3): 319-333. 2022.
    Abstract‘[T]he “mainstream” of global governance has changed course’ and in so doing, might well have ‘outrun the standard tools of critical, progressive, and reform-minded international lawyers’, Fleur Johns wrote in 2019. It is especially the critical tools of ‘appeals to history, context, language [and] the grassroots’ in response to universalist planning that Johns sees absorbed in the turn to prototyping as a new ‘style’ of governance. In this article, we take on this observation and explor…Read more