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2001

HUMAN WORLD.
A Demographic Atlas of Politics of Culture.

Year: 2001
Project Type: Research Project
Exhibited at: Galleria del Contemporaneo, Mestre, 2007
Publications: 

- Gurung, A., McGrath, B., Zha, J. China and India, Shifting Perspective on Urbanization and Globalization. New York: India and China Institute, cover image, 2009. 

- Branzi, A. Modernità Debole e Diffusa. Il mondo del Progetto all'inizio del XXI Secolo. Milano: Skira, pp. 32–33, 2006.
Author: Antonio Scarponi

This project renders legible the epistemic actions articulated as DEMA in Epistemic Design.

Human World (2001–ongoing) aims to display the world’s political and cultural information on a population basis. The project raises the question of understanding the politics of culture as a demographic challenge.

In these cartograms, each country is scaled proportionally to its population: 1 pixel equals 1,000 people. Territorial continuity is replaced by demographic weight, allowing political and cultural information to be read through population rather than geography. Political space is no longer understood as geographic surface but as distributed population.

The project refers to Alighiero Boetti’s work, reversing the association between flag and territory into a relationship between flag and population.

Human World depicts the demographic scenario of a world in which everyone is technically connected through the internet and social media. The first map of this ongoing project, Internet Users World Map (2001), was developed in reaction to the repression of the G8 protests in Genoa in 2001. Conceived at a moment when global connectivity was expanding while political violence remained territorially grounded, the project marks a decisive shift in how political space can be understood.

The series includes the following cartograms:
– Internet Users World Map, 2001
– Death Penalty Enforcement in World Countries, 2006
– Population Represented by Female Head of State, 2006
– Population in Free Countries, 2006

Although developed prior to the formal articulation of DEMA, Human World anticipates the epistemic structure later formalized as Epistemic Design, establishing a demographic field in which political space is understood as relational rather than territorial.

Displace — The project displaces political and cultural representation from territorial space to demographic scale, replacing geographic proportion with population-based visualization.

Expose — By rendering demographic data spatially visible, Human World exposes population as a primary political and cultural parameter, often obscured by territorial representation.

Mediate — Human World mediates complex political and cultural information through cartographic translation, allowing abstract data to be read as spatial relationships between populations rather than borders.

Activate — By converting demographic data into spatial form, the project renders political conditions legible within a globally interconnected field.

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