Fr. 236.00

Borderless Worlds for Whom? - Ethics, Moralities and Mobilities

English · Hardback

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Description

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The optimism heralded by the end of the Cold War and the idea of an emerging borderless world was soon shadowed by conflicts, wars, terrorism, and new border walls. Migrants, asylum seekers, and refugees have simultaneously become key political figures. Border and mobility studies are now two sides of the same coin.

The chapters of this volume reflect the changing relations between borders, bordering practices, and mobilities. They provide both theoretical insights and contextual knowledge on how borders, bordering practices, and ethical issues come together in mobilities. The chapters scrutinize how bounded (territorial) and open/networked (relational) spaces manifest in various contexts. The first section, 'Borders in a borderless world', raises theoretical questions. The second, 'Politics of inclusion and exclusion', looks at bordering practices in the context of migration. The third section, 'Contested mobilities and encounters', focuses on tourism, which has been an 'accepted' form of mobility but which has recently become an object of critique because of overtourism. Section four, 'Borders, security, politics', examines bordering practices and security in the EU and beyond, highlighting how the migration/border politics nexus has become a national and supra-national political challenge.

The chapters of this interdisciplinary volume contribute both conceptually and empirically to understanding contemporary bordering practices and mobilities. It is essential reading for geographers, political scientists, sociologists, and international relations scholars interested in the contemporary meanings of borders and mobilities.

List of contents

  1. Introduction: borders, ethics, and mobilities
  2. Anssi Paasi, Eeva-Kaisa Prokkola, Jarkko Saarinen, and Kaj Zimmerbauer
    Part I: Borders in a borderless world

  3. Borderless worlds and beyond: challenging the state-centric cartographies

  4. Anssi Paasi

  5. Imagining a borderless world

  6. Harald Bauder

  7. Borders, distance, politics

  8. Paolo Novak

    Part II: Politics of inclusion and exclusion

  9. 'Borderless' Europe and Brexit: young European migrant accounts of media uses and moralities

  10. Aija Lulle

  11. Everyday bordering, healthcare, and the politics of belonging in contemporary Britain

  12. Kathryn Cassidy

  13. 'Delay and Neglect': the everyday geopolitics of humanitarian borders

  14. Elisa Pascucci, Jouni Häkli, and Kirsi Pauliina Kallio

  15. Asylum reception and the politicization of national identity in Finland: a gender perspective

Eeva-Kaisa Prokkola

Part III: Contested mobilities and encounters
9. Tourism, border politics, and the fault lines of mobility
Raoul V. Bianchi and Marcus L. Stephenson
10. Commodification of contested borderscapes for tourism development: viability, community representation, and equity of relic Iron Curtain and Sudetenland heritage tourism landscapes
Arie Stoffelen and Dominique Vanneste
11. Contested mobilities across the Hong Kong-Shenzhen border: the case of Sheung Shui
J. J. Zhang

Part IV: Borders, security, politics
12. Trade, Trump, Security, and Ethics: The Canada-US Border in Continental Perspective
Heather N. Nicol and Karen G. Everett
13. Ontological (in)security: the EU's bordering dilemma and neighbourhood
Jussi P. Laine and James W. Scott
14. An ethical code for cross-border governance: what does the European Union say on the ethics of cross-border cooperation?
Elisabetta Nadalutti
15. The role of 'nature' at the EU maritime borders: agency, ethics, and accountability
Estela Schindel
16. Afterword: borders are there to be crossed (but not by everybody)
Noel B. Salazar



Report

"This book could not be more timely as immigration becomes the issue that could break the European Union and border anxieties pervade the world of states. The book focuses on the neglected ethical dilemmas of borders: from the ways migrants are categorized as refugees and 'economic' migrants, for example, to the fact that tourism, one of the world's major industries by value-added, depends on easy border crossing even as others are excluded, and the idea of a world without borders as being necessarily more just than the one we presently have. If populist politicians would read more, including this book, they might rant less and reason more."
- Professor John Agnew, UCLA, USA

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