
Contents
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Exploring the Limits Exploring the Limits
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Who Owns the Land? Sovereignty and World Population Who Owns the Land? Sovereignty and World Population
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Indigenous Land Indigenous Land
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Incapacity: Climate, Physiology, and the Limits to White Man’s Claims Incapacity: Climate, Physiology, and the Limits to White Man’s Claims
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Climatic Capacity and Anticolonial Determinism Climatic Capacity and Anticolonial Determinism
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5 Waste Lands: Sovereignty and the Anticolonial History of World Population
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Published:January 2014
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Abstract
This chapter illustrates the intimate relationship between colonialism and world population growth. For a time, the colonizing of global empty spaces—“waste lands”—was rationalized as a means to accommodate the colonizing nation's increasing modernization and overpopulation, and that the more recent development of all unoccupied lands being assimilated into modern political systems curtails the colonizers' attempts to make use of a spatial resource. Occupation of waste lands now had to undergo negotiation as per the law of nations, complicating the simpler colonial process of sovereignty over a given territory. Of course, the rights of a state to occupy waste lands would frequently be called into question; it is argued that the right of land occupation might simply be a matter of need, thus translating the spatial politics of earth to the politics of life.
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