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Mapping the Planetary

Mapping the Planetary

By: Center for New Critical Politics and Governance
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The podcast 'Planetary Choices' is created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance, located at Aarhus University, Denmark.


The concept of 'The Planetary' has gained increasing traction in almost all scientific disciplines. From physics, to literature, to history, law and economics — planetary thinking and policy making is taking more sophisticated shapes, amounting to an emerging new paradigm.


In season 1, called "Mapping the Planetary", we map and assess the concept of the planetary, where we stand today and in which direction planetary thinking and activism may develop in the future.


With this podcast, we also intend to explore scholarly research through an alternative venue of dissemination that allows for aural intimacy, faster publishing and full open access. As each episode contributes to a larger question investigated throughout a season, every episode becomes a data point on its own, consequently making "Planetary Choices" a place of output and on-going research.


Join us and explore the big questions of our planet!

© 2025 Mapping the Planetary
Earth Sciences Science Social Sciences
Episodes
  • The Contested History of the Global—A Conversation with Or Rosenboim
    Dec 10 2025

    In Episode 6 of Mapping the Planetary, Or Rosenboim, Professor of Contemporary History at Bologna University, joins us to explore the evolving concept of global order—from classical frameworks to contemporary debates about the future.

    Rosenboim invites us to see globalization not just as a process, but as a lens through which to interpret the world. She questions whether the idea of a fixed “world order” is itself misguided and provocatively suggests that embracing disorder could help us reimagine planetary politics.

    Is it time to rethink the very notion of “world order”? Could embracing disorder offer new approaches to global governance? And what lessons can today’s leaders draw from historical debates about global order?

    Academic Reference:

    Or Rosenboim, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, James Quilligan; The Contested History of the Global—A Conversation with Or Rosenboim. Global Perspectives 10 March 2025; 6 (1): 144299. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2025.144299

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    55 mins
  • Planetary Surfaces and Computation - A Conversation with Jussi Parikka
    Nov 25 2025

    In Episode 5 of Mapping the Planetary, Jussi Parikka, Professor of Digital Aesthetics and Culture at Aarhus University, joins us to discuss his latest book, Living Surfaces: Images, Plants, and Environments of Media, published in 2024.

    Parikka’s work explores the intersections of media history, ecology, and geology, highlighting how digital infrastructures and media technologies both shape—and are shaped by—natural environments.

    We delve into how media operates not just as a tool or platform, but as an environmental force intertwined with the living surfaces of the planet. Parikka offers insights into how artistic, technological, and ecological practices converge in the age of planetary crisis.

    Academic Reference:

    Jussi Parikka, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, James Quilligan; Planetary Surfaces and Computation—A Conversation with Jussi Parikka. Global Perspectives 10 March 2025; 6 (1): 144290. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2025.144290

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 14 mins
  • The Planet and Military Tele-Technologies—A Conversation with Ryan Bishop
    Nov 17 2025

    In Episode 4 of Mapping the Planetary, Ryan Bishop, Professor of Global Art and Politics at the University of Southampton, joins us to explain how the technological sphere increasingly shapes the geosphere of the Planet.

    Bishop unpacks the concepts of poly-scalar remote sensing and the concealed dimensions of tele-technology, reflecting on how media technologies intersect with governance and military power.

    How do remote sensing systems operating at multiple scales transform our relationship with the environment? In what ways might hidden tele-technologies constrain—or empower—individual and collective agency?

    Academic Reference:

    Ryan Bishop, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, James Quilligan; The Planet and Military Tele-Technologies—A Conversation with Ryan Bishop. Global Perspectives 10 March 2025; 6 (1): 144297. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2025.144297

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 33 mins
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