Browsing by Subject "Public engagement"
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Item Open Access Deep-sea Connections: Identifying future demand for seabed minerals(2021-04-29) Gertz, BrandonMining on the international seabed is predicted to begin at commercial scale within the next decade. Despite this, many researchers have lamented that the deep sea remains “out of sight and out of mind” to the public, leading to little engagement with the substantial questions that deep-sea mining possibilities raise. New methods are needed to enable the public to take ownership of their own stake in the use of the international seabed. In this paper, I identify ISA deep-sea mining contractors’ beneficial ownership, explore their likely industry customers, and highlight which of their products can be used to drive public engagement in the global conversation about deep-sea mining. I find that 68% of contracts are beneficially owned by state governments, while 29% are beneficially owned by non-state corporations and one contract is beneficially owned by an intergovernmental organization. While no sale agreements have been formed between deep-sea miners and companies that sell products to the public yet, ties do exist between some beneficial owners and numerous technology and automotive companies. I suggest that the automotive sector may be the most important deep-sea mining industry connection to focus on for enabling public engagement in the future. This is due to the expected use of deep-sea minerals in vehicle batteries and the ability of consumer decisions and brand reputation to impact the behavior of car companies.Item Open Access Tweeting Feminism: African Feminisms, Digital Counterpublics and The Politics of Gendered Violence(2019-05) Kanyogo, MumbiTweeting feminism is a digital ethnographic and archival study of the ways in which Kenyan feminists appropriate Twitter as a site for community building. Firstly, I explore the mutually enabling modes of gendered violence that have been deeply engrained in Kenya’s public sphere for the duration of its existence as a nation-state – what I call a continuum of patriarchal violence. These modes of harm ultimately short-circuit women’s engagement in mainstream politics and therefore the use of public political space to contend with harm exacted on women. In the wake of this violence, I then contend that a “digital feminist counterpublic sphere” emerges – a term which I use to describe the alternative publics that radical Kenyan feminists have developed to survive their exclusion from formal public sphere engagement. I argue that in this online space, radical Kenyan feminists use disrespectability, care, solidarity practices and archival practices – what I call digital ululations – to generate and strengthen feminist community.