Invisible Borders in a Bordered World
Power, Mobility, and Belonging
Herausgeber: Diener, Alexander C; Hagen, Joshua
Invisible Borders in a Bordered World
Power, Mobility, and Belonging
Herausgeber: Diener, Alexander C; Hagen, Joshua
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This book critically challenges the usual territorial understanding of borders by examining the often messy internal, transborder, ambiguous, and in-between spaces that co-exist with traditional borders.
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This book critically challenges the usual territorial understanding of borders by examining the often messy internal, transborder, ambiguous, and in-between spaces that co-exist with traditional borders.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 286
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Mai 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 435g
- ISBN-13: 9781032276984
- ISBN-10: 1032276983
- Artikelnr.: 70346094
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 286
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Mai 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 435g
- ISBN-13: 9781032276984
- ISBN-10: 1032276983
- Artikelnr.: 70346094
Alexander C. Diener is a Professor of Geography in the Department of Geography and Atmospheric Science at the University of Kansas, USA. Joshua Hagen is the Dean of the College of Letters and Science at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, USA.
List of Figures and Tables. Acknowledgements. List of Contributors.1.
Geographies of Visibility and Invisibility: Strategies of Spatial Control
and Differentiation. Part I: Invisible Borders of Political Control. 2. No
(Wo)Man's Land: Risking Detention along the South Ossetian Administrative
Boundary Line. 3. "It's All One Place": Geographic Networks in a West
African Borderland since Independence. 4. Transboundary Water Management in
Separatist Regions: Towards a Geography of Hydro-Political Tensions. 5.
Bordering the South China Sea: Maritime Claims, Contested Sovereignty, and
Novel Territorialities. Part II: Invisible Borders of Socioeconomic
Control. 6. Navigating Invisible Border Spaces in Switzerland: What
Rejected Asylum Seekers' Lives Can Tell Us about Everyday Bordering
Practices. 7. Airbnb and the Boundaries of the Tourist Center: How
Peer-to-Peer Rental Platforms Have Altered the Tourist Zone in San
Sebastian, Spain. 8. Losing Ground: Indigenous Territoriality and the
Núcleo Agrario in Mexico. 9. Layers and Ranges of Disabling Borders:
Post-Soviet Uzbekistan. 10. "Not . . . Places of High Consequence": The
Great Plains, Internal Colonization, and Pipelines in American Media
Coverage. Part III: Invisible Borders of Technological Control. 11.
Encrypted Geographies: Invisible Cryptographic Borders. 12. Borders in
Cyberspace: The Limits to the Space of Flows. 13. Hiding in Plain Sight:
The Power of Biometric Border Technologies. 14. Invisible Borders into the
Twenty-First Century: Towards a Research Agenda for Invisibility.
Geographies of Visibility and Invisibility: Strategies of Spatial Control
and Differentiation. Part I: Invisible Borders of Political Control. 2. No
(Wo)Man's Land: Risking Detention along the South Ossetian Administrative
Boundary Line. 3. "It's All One Place": Geographic Networks in a West
African Borderland since Independence. 4. Transboundary Water Management in
Separatist Regions: Towards a Geography of Hydro-Political Tensions. 5.
Bordering the South China Sea: Maritime Claims, Contested Sovereignty, and
Novel Territorialities. Part II: Invisible Borders of Socioeconomic
Control. 6. Navigating Invisible Border Spaces in Switzerland: What
Rejected Asylum Seekers' Lives Can Tell Us about Everyday Bordering
Practices. 7. Airbnb and the Boundaries of the Tourist Center: How
Peer-to-Peer Rental Platforms Have Altered the Tourist Zone in San
Sebastian, Spain. 8. Losing Ground: Indigenous Territoriality and the
Núcleo Agrario in Mexico. 9. Layers and Ranges of Disabling Borders:
Post-Soviet Uzbekistan. 10. "Not . . . Places of High Consequence": The
Great Plains, Internal Colonization, and Pipelines in American Media
Coverage. Part III: Invisible Borders of Technological Control. 11.
Encrypted Geographies: Invisible Cryptographic Borders. 12. Borders in
Cyberspace: The Limits to the Space of Flows. 13. Hiding in Plain Sight:
The Power of Biometric Border Technologies. 14. Invisible Borders into the
Twenty-First Century: Towards a Research Agenda for Invisibility.
List of Figures and Tables. Acknowledgements. List of Contributors.1.
Geographies of Visibility and Invisibility: Strategies of Spatial Control
and Differentiation. Part I: Invisible Borders of Political Control. 2. No
(Wo)Man's Land: Risking Detention along the South Ossetian Administrative
Boundary Line. 3. "It's All One Place": Geographic Networks in a West
African Borderland since Independence. 4. Transboundary Water Management in
Separatist Regions: Towards a Geography of Hydro-Political Tensions. 5.
Bordering the South China Sea: Maritime Claims, Contested Sovereignty, and
Novel Territorialities. Part II: Invisible Borders of Socioeconomic
Control. 6. Navigating Invisible Border Spaces in Switzerland: What
Rejected Asylum Seekers' Lives Can Tell Us about Everyday Bordering
Practices. 7. Airbnb and the Boundaries of the Tourist Center: How
Peer-to-Peer Rental Platforms Have Altered the Tourist Zone in San
Sebastian, Spain. 8. Losing Ground: Indigenous Territoriality and the
Núcleo Agrario in Mexico. 9. Layers and Ranges of Disabling Borders:
Post-Soviet Uzbekistan. 10. "Not . . . Places of High Consequence": The
Great Plains, Internal Colonization, and Pipelines in American Media
Coverage. Part III: Invisible Borders of Technological Control. 11.
Encrypted Geographies: Invisible Cryptographic Borders. 12. Borders in
Cyberspace: The Limits to the Space of Flows. 13. Hiding in Plain Sight:
The Power of Biometric Border Technologies. 14. Invisible Borders into the
Twenty-First Century: Towards a Research Agenda for Invisibility.
Geographies of Visibility and Invisibility: Strategies of Spatial Control
and Differentiation. Part I: Invisible Borders of Political Control. 2. No
(Wo)Man's Land: Risking Detention along the South Ossetian Administrative
Boundary Line. 3. "It's All One Place": Geographic Networks in a West
African Borderland since Independence. 4. Transboundary Water Management in
Separatist Regions: Towards a Geography of Hydro-Political Tensions. 5.
Bordering the South China Sea: Maritime Claims, Contested Sovereignty, and
Novel Territorialities. Part II: Invisible Borders of Socioeconomic
Control. 6. Navigating Invisible Border Spaces in Switzerland: What
Rejected Asylum Seekers' Lives Can Tell Us about Everyday Bordering
Practices. 7. Airbnb and the Boundaries of the Tourist Center: How
Peer-to-Peer Rental Platforms Have Altered the Tourist Zone in San
Sebastian, Spain. 8. Losing Ground: Indigenous Territoriality and the
Núcleo Agrario in Mexico. 9. Layers and Ranges of Disabling Borders:
Post-Soviet Uzbekistan. 10. "Not . . . Places of High Consequence": The
Great Plains, Internal Colonization, and Pipelines in American Media
Coverage. Part III: Invisible Borders of Technological Control. 11.
Encrypted Geographies: Invisible Cryptographic Borders. 12. Borders in
Cyberspace: The Limits to the Space of Flows. 13. Hiding in Plain Sight:
The Power of Biometric Border Technologies. 14. Invisible Borders into the
Twenty-First Century: Towards a Research Agenda for Invisibility.