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Andrea Carlà, Grote, Georg Grote
Changing Borders and Challenging Belonging - Policy Change and Private Experience
English · Paperback / Softback
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Description
«This timely and important book provides a critical look at borders and belonging. It illuminates the tensions and contradictions that often exist within the logic of legal and political mechanisms that define regional and national boundaries and the reality of the lives lived within these constructions. The resulting essays are instructive, thought-provoking and sometimes very moving explorations of the making and meaning of historical and contemporary borderlands.»
(Roisín Higgins, Professor of History, National University of Ireland Maynooth)
«This volume is a masterful combination of analyses of feelings of belonging and identities following from changing state and cultural borders in the past and present and their challenges for living together. Its chapters analyse the intersections of people, territory, institutions and law from theoretical perspectives as well as through reflexive individual experience of social identity formation from below, often with a focus on their contestation in (re-)territorialized sub-state regions.»
(Josef Marko, Professor of Comparative Public Law and Political Sciences, University of Graz)
Both the Brexit process and the Covid pandemic have challenged the idealistic concept that borders in Europe and elsewhere were becoming ever more permeable. The idea that the world was becoming a global village has been seriously eroded. Meanwhile, the war in Ukraine has once again highlighted how power politics draws borders and shapes belongings. This has necessitated analyses of the nature of human-made borders and boundaries and the consequences for individuals and collectives who experience inclusion or exclusion on their feelings of belonging and their identities. Similarly, governmental policies within states have created majorities and minorities and have caused grave implications for those groups at the receiving end of legislation and state actions.
This multidisciplinary volume comprises essays from researchers and academics, located in Europe and beyond, who investigate the effects of border creation, social and legal inclusivity and exclusion on individuals and collective identities in the past and today. Combining «from above» and «from below» perspectives, the volume explores macro-political processes affecting borders and senses of belonging as well as their intersections at the microlevel, including private views and individual responses to such types of processes.
List of contents
Contents: Georg Grote and Andrea Carlà: Changing Borders and Challenging Belonging: Policy Change and Private Experience - Jussi P. Laine: On Unbounded Belongingness: An Exploration into Reconfiguring Borders beyond Dualisms and Detachment - Roberta Medda-Windischer and Karl Kössler: Integration of Third-Country Nationals in Subnational Entities: Is Regional Citizenship a Viable Instrument? - Leah Simmons Wood: «Taking back control»: Brexit and UK Border Policies - Andrea Carlà: Navigating the Implications of Consociational Power-Sharing Regimes: Power-Sharing and (De)securitization in Northern Ireland and South Tyrol - Alexandra Tomaselli: Divided across Borders: The Impacts of the Creation of States on Indigenous Peoples and Their Rights in Northern Europe - Tobias Weger: Borders, Demography, Politics and Pragmatism: The Case of Dobrudja/Dobrogea/Dobrudza since 1878 - Enikö Dácz: Changing Political Landscapes - Adapting Biographies: Three Ideologically Engaged Transylvanian Saxon Writers before and after 1945 in Bra ov, Vienna and Munich - Winfried R. Garscha: Being Made Jewish: A Secular Jewish Girl Fleeing Hitler's Vienna - Identity Discourses through the Eyes of Ruth Maier's Diary - Katie Holmes: The Inspector, the Men and the Mallee: Establishing a Soldier Settlement in 1919-20 - Markus Wurzer: Colonial Wars, Dis/ Loyalty and Discourses of Belonging at Italy's Margins - Georg Grote: «Siblings are being torn apart, brothers may shoot each other ...»: The Hitler-Mussolini Agreement of 1939 and the Fate of One South Tyrolean Family.
About the author
Georg Grote
is a historian and Senior Researcher in the Institute for Minority Rights of Eurac Research in Bozen/Bolzano (South Tyrol - Italy). He holds a PhD in History from Westfälische Wilhelms University, Münster, Germany. He works on minority histories in nationalist and regionalist contexts in Europe and has recently published a three-volume history of the South Tyrol issue in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, based on regional private archives. He previously taught in the National University of Ireland.
Andrea Carlà
is Senior Researcher at the Institute for Minority Rights of Eurac Research in Bozen/Bolzano (South Tyrol - Italy). He holds a PhD in Politics from the New School for Social Research, New York, USA. His research explores the interplay among ethnic politics/minority protection, migration studies and security issues, focusing in particular on the concepts of (de)securitization and human security and their application to minority issues. He is the co-editor of
Migration in Autonomous Territories: The Case of South Tyrol and Catalonia
(2015).
Product details
Assisted by | Andrea Carlà (Editor), Grote (Editor), Georg Grote (Editor) |
Publisher | Peter Lang |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 29.12.2023 |
EAN | 9781800796645 |
ISBN | 978-1-80079-664-5 |
No. of pages | 282 |
Dimensions | 152 mm x 15 mm x 229 mm |
Weight | 424 g |
Illustrations | 9 Abb. |
Subject |
Humanities, art, music
> History
> General, dictionaries
|
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