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[[File:Unsettlingcover.png|thumb|300px|Cover with four differently obfuscated photographs, reading 'Unsettling Data / Mapping Labour and Land against the Representationalist Legal Form - Dilan Dagaz']] | [[File:Unsettlingcover.png|thumb|300px|Cover with four differently obfuscated photographs, reading 'Unsettling Data / Mapping Labour and Land against the Representationalist Legal Form - Dilan Dagaz']] | ||
<br>'''Details''' | |||
ISBN: | |||
382 pages | |||
Publication Date: | |||
License: Migrantifa Commons BY-NC | |||
Donation: | |||
Download: coming soon | |||
'''Description''' | |||
What prevents data governance law from redressing the widespread exploitation of labour and land rampant across the data economies of our digital Earth? | What prevents data governance law from redressing the widespread exploitation of labour and land rampant across the data economies of our digital Earth? | ||
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and the observed. The role of the modern legal form in fortifying and obscuring these power relations is elucidated. Proposing representationalism as | and the observed. The role of the modern legal form in fortifying and obscuring these power relations is elucidated. Proposing representationalism as | ||
the framework to map these hidden yet pervasive power relations, the book reveals how the representationalist legal form serves to delink the agency of the | the framework to map these hidden yet pervasive power relations, the book reveals how the representationalist legal form serves to delink the agency of the | ||
data subject from unjust labour and land exploitation in the digital political economy. Highlighting the importance of Indigenous/Adivasi perspectives for unsettling the philosophical core of Western(ised) data governance, ''Unsettling Data'' argues for the formal reconceptualisation of data as the entangled human and unhuman agencies implicated in its production; paving the way for a new legal grammar of data rooted in relational reciprocity. | data subject from unjust labour and land exploitation in the digital political economy. Highlighting the importance of Indigenous/Adivasi perspectives for unsettling the philosophical core of Western(ised) data governance, ''Unsettling Data'' argues for the formal reconceptualisation of data as the entangled human and unhuman agencies implicated in its production; paving the way for a new legal grammar of data rooted in relational reciprocity. | ||
''Unsettling Data'' will be of interest to readers in critical legal theory, law and humanities, law | ''Unsettling Data'' will be of interest to readers in critical legal theory, law and humanities, law | ||
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aesthetics of data from a critical lens. | aesthetics of data from a critical lens. | ||
'''Author''' | |||
Dilan Dagaz is an independent researcher and writer based in the UK. He has previously served as a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in Law at the University of Exeter and holds a PhD in Legal Sciences ''summa cum laude'' from the Humboldt University of Berlin. Having worked under different names with the civil society and academia across India, Germany, and UK, he holds significant international experience of policy advocacy, research communication, teaching and organising on issues of digital rights, net neutrality, media law, algorithmic regulation, data governance, and intellectual property. Stepping away from academia and the mainstream legal world, Dilan currently practises as a witch, with research interests at the intersection of magic, law, science, and the nature of reality. | |||
'''Table of Contents''' | |||
Note from the Author | |||
Acknowledgments | |||
Poem: I am not your data | |||
''Part I: Framing Representationalism'' | |||
1. Introduction | |||
2. Representationalism and Data’s Legal Form | |||
''Part II: Exposing Representationalist Configurations'' | |||
3. Data Within the Non-Law | |||
4. Data Within the Law | |||
5. Data between the Legal Person and Thing | |||
''Part III: Unsettling Representationalist Imaginaries'' | |||
6. Data and the Erasure of Human Agency | |||
7. Data and the Erasure of Unhuman Agency | |||
Epilogue | |||
Beyond Representationalism: Divinatory Play Projects | |||
Beyond Representationalism: Tactics of Earthy Data | |||
[[Category: TITiPI publishing]] | [[Category: TITiPI publishing]] | ||
Revision as of 13:32, 29 December 2025
Unsettling Data
Mapping Labour and Land against the Representationalist Legal Form

Details
ISBN:
382 pages
Publication Date:
License: Migrantifa Commons BY-NC
Donation:
Download: coming soon
Description
What prevents data governance law from redressing the widespread exploitation of labour and land rampant across the data economies of our digital Earth? Unsettling Data answers this question by scrutinising the legal grammar of ‘data’ to expose the persistence of hierarchical power relations between the observer and the observed. The role of the modern legal form in fortifying and obscuring these power relations is elucidated. Proposing representationalism as the framework to map these hidden yet pervasive power relations, the book reveals how the representationalist legal form serves to delink the agency of the data subject from unjust labour and land exploitation in the digital political economy. Highlighting the importance of Indigenous/Adivasi perspectives for unsettling the philosophical core of Western(ised) data governance, Unsettling Data argues for the formal reconceptualisation of data as the entangled human and unhuman agencies implicated in its production; paving the way for a new legal grammar of data rooted in relational reciprocity.
Unsettling Data will be of interest to readers in critical legal theory, law and humanities, law and political economy, data protection, information law, AI governance, intellectual property as well as anyone seeking to understand the legal form or aesthetics of data from a critical lens.
Author
Dilan Dagaz is an independent researcher and writer based in the UK. He has previously served as a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in Law at the University of Exeter and holds a PhD in Legal Sciences summa cum laude from the Humboldt University of Berlin. Having worked under different names with the civil society and academia across India, Germany, and UK, he holds significant international experience of policy advocacy, research communication, teaching and organising on issues of digital rights, net neutrality, media law, algorithmic regulation, data governance, and intellectual property. Stepping away from academia and the mainstream legal world, Dilan currently practises as a witch, with research interests at the intersection of magic, law, science, and the nature of reality.
Table of Contents
Note from the Author
Acknowledgments
Poem: I am not your data
Part I: Framing Representationalism
1. Introduction
2. Representationalism and Data’s Legal Form
Part II: Exposing Representationalist Configurations
3. Data Within the Non-Law
4. Data Within the Law
5. Data between the Legal Person and Thing
Part III: Unsettling Representationalist Imaginaries
6. Data and the Erasure of Human Agency
7. Data and the Erasure of Unhuman Agency
Epilogue
Beyond Representationalism: Divinatory Play Projects
Beyond Representationalism: Tactics of Earthy Data