Published in the European Institute of the Mediterranean (Barcelona). The article (PDF) is open access.
This paper focuses on the concept of techno-fundamentalism which side sidesteps politics in favor of taking on social problems and translating them into technical solutions. The article provides an analysis of the opportunities and backlashes that can emanate from the use of modern digital technology as a political tool in the context of the Mediterranean basin. Based on its historical and philosophical legacy, the Mediterranean, seen as a spatial geographical entity, has the potential to become a hub for the development of a new political imagination. This paper examines how Spain, Italy, Greece, Egypt, Turkey, among others, have engaged with the problem of techno-fundamentalism and why there is a need to draw on politics and the humanities to imagine a better future, a new Mediterranean social contract.