Atossa Araxia Abrahamian
National Fellow, 2024
国产视频 2024 Fellow Atossa A. Abrahamian spoke about her forthcoming book, The Hidden Globe, for 鈥淭hree questions鈥 in The Fifth Draft, the Fellows Program鈥檚 monthly newsletter. Abrahamian is an independent journalist who writes about the cracks in the nation-state system.
Your Fellows project is the forthcoming book,聽,聽which explores extraterritorial zones that operate largely autonomously and, increasingly, for the benefit of the wealthiest individuals and corporations. Can you share the genesis of the project?
I came at the project from two directions. The first was personal: I grew up in Geneva, Switzerland, which is full of weird little enclaves鈥攖he Geneva Freeport, the United Nations and its sister agencies, all the consulates and missions, and for a long time the Swiss banks鈥攕o I鈥檝e always felt drawn to places with rules that don鈥檛 quite fit on the map. Then, in the aftermath of Trump and Brexit and Modi and Orban鈥檚 elections, I noticed that commentators were talking about 鈥済lobalism鈥 and 鈥渘ationalism鈥 in binary terms, which isn鈥檛 very accurate at all. It made me want to show that hard-to-place jurisdictions often serve as the missing link between these two ideologies, allowing them to co-exist more or less peacefully in matters of trade, diplomacy, taxation, immigration, even culture.
One land, one flag, one law, one people has globally never been the norm and probably never will be.
How do you think the concept of sovereignty will evolve in the public consciousness as it intersects with issues such as climate change, nation-state governance, and even space exploration?
I briefly considered writing the book without once using the term 鈥渟overeignty鈥 because it can mean so many things! But when politicians talk about 鈥渟overeignty鈥濃攐r worse, 鈥淲estphalian sovereignty鈥濃攖hey鈥檙e typically referring to an ideal that only really makes sense in retrospect, as mythology. One land, one flag, one law, one people has globally never been the norm and probably never will be. Our world has always been much more complicated and interesting than that, and I hope that our understanding of it evolves to reflect that reality.
Outer space is such a good medium to think through how that might look in practice, because there can鈥檛 be territorial nation-states in space, but there can be state power, whether we鈥檙e talking about potential military operations or mining for natural resources. So how do you square that with one land, one law, one flag, one people when there鈥檚 no land, flag, binding law or even any people?
Can extraterritorial spaces be harnessed for positive purposes and contribute to a more utopian vision of sovereignty and statehood?
I would love to give you an unequivocal 鈥測es鈥 but I am ambivalent. On the one hand, I am all for challenging or just supplementing the structures of the nation-state with new, unusual, and plain different kinds of jurisdictions. I think there鈥檚 a way to do it right if the political will is there. We might imagine free zones for people, where anyone can just show up to and be safe from harm and able to make a living; or large-scale ecological zones that go beyond the national parks and protected areas we have today and, hopefully, be part of the solution to stop global warming.
The problem is that the 鈥渁lt鈥 jurisdictions that exist today鈥攕pecial economic zones, flags of convenience, business courts, tax havens, offshore refugee processing centers, and so on鈥攅nd up enabling more of the bad stuff, like making the rich richer, and less of the good stuff, which is making space for humanity (as opposed to business) to thrive.
But I do think it鈥檚 time to integrate these places into our worldview, both to challenge their negative impacts and build up more positive ones. Say what you will about capitalists, but the way they鈥檝e carved out this space for themselves is incredibly clever. Certainly it won鈥檛 hurt if the political left takes a page from their book and starts to think more creatively about what鈥檚 possible.
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