8,586 results on '"Border"'
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202. MIGRATION TO EUROPE AND RIGHT-WING POPULISM IN THE CONTEXT OF THE UKRAINIAN-RUSSIAN WAR.
- Author
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MANTOĞLU, Ayşem Selen and ÜSTE, Ahmet Nazmi
- Subjects
RIGHT-wing populism ,RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
With the war between Ukraincand Russia, Ukrainians began to migrate to Europe. Europe is also home to migrants from Africa and the Middle East All these migration movements have made the theses of right-wing populists in Europe attractive and influenced positively the right-wing populists' electoral success. Europe is struggling with waves of migration and at the same time is experiencing the rise of right-wing populists. In order to increase border security, protect sovereignty and preserve the local culture, a multidimensional border security concept is being implemented that exploits all the possibilities of technology. In the political space that is secured to protect the territory in which sovereignty is based, the phenomenon of migration is countered with right-wing populist elements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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203. EXPLORANDO LAS GEOGRAFÍAS COTIDIANAS DE LAS FRONTERAS A TRAVÉS DE CUATRO ARTEFACTOS: LA ESQUINA, EL PUENTE, LA TRANQUERA Y EL DESIERTO.
- Author
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Porcaro, Tania
- Subjects
EVERYDAY life ,GEOGRAPHIC boundaries ,GEOGRAPHY ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Copyright of Universum is the property of Instituto de Estudios Humanisticos Juan Ignacio Molina, Universidad de Talca and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
204. Keabsahan Penutupan Perbatasan oleh Spanyol Selaku Negara Anggota Uni Eropa dalam Menghadapi Pandemi Covid-19.
- Author
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Sumhudi, Faizin Achmad
- Abstract
Copyright of Jurist-Diction is the property of Universitas Airlangga and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
205. EDUCAR Y CIVILIZAR A LOS «INDIOS». LAS ESCUELAS RURALES EN LA FRONTERA SUR DE BUENOS AIRES (1850-1880).
- Author
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Orta Moreno, Laura
- Subjects
SOCIAL interaction ,FEDERAL government ,CITIES & towns ,RELIGIOUS schools ,VILLAGES - Abstract
Copyright of Intus-Legere Historia is the property of Intus-Legere Historia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
206. The Eclectic Heritage-Scape of a Tense Border in the Paju DMZ, South Korea.
- Author
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Hyun Kyung LEE and VIEJO-ROSE, Dacia
- Subjects
- *
KOREAN War, 1950-1953 , *HISTORIC sites , *COLD War, 1945-1991 , *INTERNATIONAL visitors - Abstract
Born of the fratricidal Korean War (1950-1953), Korea's Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) endures as the oldest continuous frontline of the Cold War. It is also a sealed heritage site, replete with accumulated emotions, trauma, and tension. Given the strict restrictions to access, until recently the DMZ has remained largely imaginary to the public, yet it has been attracting growing interest. The appeal of the Paju DMZ is that it provides the only public window through which the North can be glimpsed from the South. First opened to international visitors in the 1970s through a so-called "security DMZ tour" it was from 2000 increasingly promoted to both domestic and international visitors under the new name "peace and security DMZ tour." Tracing the tour route in Paju, this study examines the formation of the Cold War heritage-scape to understand the role of border heritage in Korea today. We pay particular attention to the heritagization of the Paju DMZ from 1953 to the present. This study also assesses the degree to which the heritage-scape of the Paju DMZ contributes to the representation of peace and reconciliation that the tour aims to convey. We argue that Korea's border heritage acts as a bellwether for the broader inter-Korean relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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207. Post-Soviet settlement of the Sino-Soviet border: a failed attempt at a three-level game, 1991–2012.
- Author
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Tagirova, Alsu
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL agenda , *NEGOTIATION , *LANGUAGE & languages , *POLITICAL science - Abstract
After the fall of the USSR, the newly established republics had to finish negotiating the bilateral border issue with China. These states chose to have the talks as a joint delegation of post-Soviet states. They also each experienced pressure from domestic constituencies. Viewing the entire negotiation process as a three-level game, the paper argues that in all four post-Soviet states the national governments believed the cost of 'no agreement' with China on the border issue to be so high that they chose to risk dealing with complex issues at home over passing up the opportunity to settle the border with their strongest neighbour. They did so with little regard for domestic opposition or the restrictions posed by the previous commitments on the supranational level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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208. BalancingDualities and Fusing Opposites: Reading JhumpaLahiri’sInterpreters of Maladies.
- Author
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Mehmood, Sadaf
- Subjects
INDIAN women (Asians) ,GENDER identity ,BORDER crossing ,FRONTIER & pioneer life ,READING ,INTERPERSONAL confrontation - Abstract
With a focus on Jhumpa Lahiri’s Interpreter of Maladies, this research investigates the intricate existence of Indian women caught up in the conventional marginalization at the hands of patriarchy in their home country and repressions of otherness across new borders. By employing Gloria Anzaldua’s concept of “balancing dualities and fusing opposites”, I analyze Lahiri’s text in order to explore how, oscillating between displacement and resettlement, gendered identities are formed in the in-between space of acceptance across borders. Border crossing is mostly embedded in the experiences of displacement, alienation, and longing for belonging. Diasporic experiences are heterogeneous in articulating the loss and pains of dislocation, uprootedness, and struggles of immigrants to territorialize across new borders. This study explores the diverse experiences of diasporic women in the confrontation of the opposite borders of old and new and scrutinizes how they make their lives meaningful in their respective situations. In this paper, I argue that life across borders offers an in-between space for doubly marginalized women by resisting the hierarchical patterns at home and abroad and balancing these dualities in the liminal space between two cultures. Moreover, this cross-border life also strives towards fusing cultural opposites in the space of un/belonging through strategic resistance and resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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209. The Other Side of the Border: Solidarity and the Syrian Displacement in Lebanon.
- Author
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Ferreri, Veronica
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SYRIAN Civil War, 2011- ,BORDER security ,GUERRILLA warfare ,POLITICAL movements ,SOCIAL problems - Abstract
In the wake of the Syrian uprising in 2011, Syrian dissidents in Lebanon cultivated their revolutionary commitment with the support of Lebanese communities. This political solidarity morphed into humanitarian care toward wounded and displaced Syrians in response to the emergency created by the war. With the mutations of the war in Syria and the collapse of the revolution as a political project, these solidarities were reconfigured to tackle the everyday hardship of displacement. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Lebanon (2014–2019), the article retraces the manifold incarnations of revolutionary solidarity in Lebanon and their relation to the other side of the border. By moving away from hospitality, the article rethinks the Syrian displacement in Lebanon through the concept of solidarity and its spatial and temporal intricacies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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210. ENSINO SUPERIOR NAS TERRITORIALIDADES TRANSFRONTEIRIÇAS.
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Moreira de Abreu, Tânia Marta, Ferreira Cury, Mauro José, Carlos dos Santos, José, and Pasquotto Mariani, Milton Augusto
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UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Foco (Interdisciplinary Studies Journal) is the property of Revista Foco and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
211. Criminalizing Humanitarian Aid at the U.S.-Mexico Border
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Marti, Olivia and Zepeda-Millán, Chris, Ph.D.
- Subjects
border ,criminalization ,humanitarian aid ,immigration - Abstract
This brief reveals that the American public overwhelmingly (87%) opposes—including the vast majority of Republicans (71%)—the criminalization of humanitarian aid workers at the border.
- Published
- 2020
212. Remote control of migration: theorising territoriality, shared coercion, and deterrence
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FitzGerald, David Scott
- Subjects
Remote control ,externalisation ,border ,asylum ,territoriality ,migration deterrence ,Demography ,Sociology - Published
- 2020
213. Cleaning up the U.S.-Mexico Border: NADBank’s Efforts to Close the Wastewater Infrastructure Gap
- Author
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Allen, Linda
- Subjects
NADBank ,Mexico ,Border ,Wastewater Infrastructure ,Water Quality - Abstract
The North American Development Bank (NADBank) was established in 1994 to “cleanup” the border region, which was characterized at the time as an open sewer. This research examines NADBank’s cleanup efforts to date by analyzing data from published reports, articles, and archival records using descriptive statistics and geospatial analysis. Overall, NADBank has provided almost $760 million in loans and grants to support the implementation of 133 wastewater infrastructure projects that have a total construction cost of $1.9 billion. Although a substantial investment, these projects have not fully addressed the wastewater infrastructure needs of the border, estimated in 1993 to be between $4.3 and $6 billion. However, these infrastructure projects have resulted in some tangible improvements in water quality in major transboundary rivers. Unfortunately, the border region continues to be plagued by discharges of raw sewage and additional investment in infrastructure and institutional capacity is needed to fully resolve the problems.
- Published
- 2020
214. The People Divided by the Border (Comparative Characteristics of Germans in Russia and Kazakhstan)
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Tatyana B. Smirnova and Anna N. Blinova
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russian germans ,germans of kazakhstan ,ethnic identity ,border ,ethno-sociological survey ,ethno-consolidating features ,language ,historical memory ,emigration ,public organizations ,History (General) and history of Europe ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Germans who previously lived in the same state were separated by state borders after the collapse of the USSR. Living in newly independent States launched the processes of ethnic self-determination and adaptation to new socio-cultural and political conditions. Based on the results of ethnosociological surveys of the German population in Russia and Kazakhstan, we give a comparative characteristic of the identity of Germans in these countries. In general, the identity of Germans in the post-Soviet space has many common features, which are determined by the common historical fate, cultural and linguistic unity, the presence of support programs from Germany and the active activity of public organizations. The differences in the identity of the Germans of Russia and Kazakhstan are related to the peculiarities of national policy, including historical memory and the state language. The development of the identity of Kazakh Germans takes place in somewhat more difficult conditions, since in Kazakhstan the number of the German population has decreased almost fivefold over the years of independence (while the emigration potential is still high), and there are no areas of compact residence of Germans. In the sphere of ethno-linguistic processes, we have noted the presence of bilingualism and trilingualism of Germans in Russia and Kazakhstan and the decline in the popularity of learning German in school institutions. The special, specific features of this new identity are connected with the political and cultural realities of the new States.
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- 2023
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215. L''esodo' dei venezuelani in Colombia. Tra sfide migratorie, processi di pace e ricomposizione dell’ordine sociale
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Thea Rossi
- Subjects
venezuelan migration ,colombia ,border ,social order ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
The current migratory movement from Venezuela to Colombia is at the heart of a heated debate. This paper aims to focus the attention on the Colombian context, starting from the transition process generated after the internal armed conflict. After that, border dynamics and migration policies will be examined, highlighting how the centrality of the subject order / disorder, social harmony / disharmony has also oriented the construction of the figure of the Venezuelan migrant both politically and in the media, with consequences on the reception and inclusion.
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- 2023
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216. Tourism Development in the Borderlands of Romania: A Case Study of the Danube Gorge–Iron Gates
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Băbăț Andrei-Florin and Pavel Sorin
- Subjects
border ,tourism ,danube gorge ,ecotourism ,infrastructure ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
Border areas are a real challenge for tourism development. Usually associated with the periphery from a socio-economic point of view, these areas often have natural potential and attractive landscapes that have been little transformed by human activity and numerous historical and cultural tourist attractions. Although these areas have considerable tourism potential, this is not sufficient for the sustainable development of tourism and the exploitation of this potential is strongly influenced by the degree of permeability of the border. This is the case of the Romanian-Serbian border, which overlaps the most spectacular sector of the Danube – the Iron Gates Gorge. The main aim of this article is to analyse the role of tourism in the development of border areas and how it functions in a particular territorial context: the Danube Gorge located at the border between Romania and Serbia. The Romanian-Serbian border currently functions as an external border of the European Union in a favourable historical and political context, given the tradition of good neighbourliness between the two entities, the states located on either side of the Danube. However, the communist period altered the prospects for tourism development in this region through a very drastic and controlled border regime, even though the area benefited from major investment projects, such as the dam and hydroelectric power station at Porțile de Fier, built in the 1970s in cooperation with the former Yugoslavia. An analysis of the statistical data on tourism development shows that tourist traffic is on the increase, although there is a contradiction between the upward trend in tourist flows and the backwardness of large-scale tourist infrastructure, with the dominant type of accommodation being small, flexible, and rural accommodation that does not require large investments. The results presented in this article can be summarised in the general conclusion that the development of tourism in the Danube Gorge–Iron Gates remains dependent on the political factor and the border regime, even though the region has a remarkable tourism potential.
- Published
- 2022
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217. Bilinguism and Translinguism in Contemporary Literature
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Svetlana V. Ananyeva
- Subjects
national image ,transculturalism ,national literature ,ethnicity ,border ,dialogue of cultures ,discursive world ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
In the post-Covid and post-literacy contexts, a new research field is being formed that combines multilingualism, multimodality and multiculturalism. The change in the world determines the transformation of the principles of dialogicity under the influence of a single global communication space, the exclusion of options for the development of relations from tolerance to conflict. B. Kenzheev, A. Kim, G. Belger write about the search for answers to the most important questions of our time, the challenges of globalization and how it contributes to the disclosure of the ethnocultural world, the universal and global concerns. Bilingualism is seen as a means of intercultural transfer; translingualism - as the use of a language (native or acquired), which makes it possible to encrypt a different cultural reality in a text.
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- 2022
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218. Antebellum Literary Cartography and the Construction of an American Oceanic Space
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Hou, Jie, Tally Jr., Robert T., Series Editor, and Fang, Ying, editor
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- 2022
- Full Text
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219. Ironic inversions and stable purposes: reimagining political traditions in Ireland after the EU Referendum 2016
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Gormley‑Heenan, Cathy, Aughey, Arthur, Bevir, Mark, editor, and Beech, Matt, editor
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- 2022
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220. Camp Settings in the EU, Australia, and Their Extended Border Zones
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Razum, Oliver, Butenop, Joost, Razum, Oliver, editor, Dawson, Angus, editor, Eckenwiler, Lisa, editor, and Wild, Verina, editor
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- 2022
- Full Text
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221. Tanks, Wells, Tacos, and Pitches
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Rogers, Susan, Marinic, Gregory, editor, and Meninato, Pablo, editor
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- 2022
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222. Quasi-Informality on the Border: The Economic and Socio-Spatial Dimensions of Latino Vendor Markets
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Ely-Ledesma, Edna, Marinic, Gregory, editor, and Meninato, Pablo, editor
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- 2022
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223. #4 Border Security (Bordersec) (bs1)
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Paleri, Prabhakaran and Paleri, Prabhakaran
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- 2022
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224. Frontier
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Armstrong, Jackson W., Armstrong, Jackson W., editor, Crooks, Peter, editor, and Ruddick, Andrea, editor
- Published
- 2022
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225. Divided Berlin and Divided Germany in Young Adult Literature: Crossing Borders from the East to the West and Vice Versa
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Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer and Jörg Meibauer
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berlin ,border ,divided germany ,refugees ,socialism ,young adult literature ,Literature (General) ,PN1-6790 - Abstract
In postwar Germany, inner-German borders were much disputed. While Germans widely deplored the division of their country and capital city, strong political forces in the East and the West struggled for their spheres of influence. Hence, moving from the East to the West or from the West to the East is the subject of many narratives. Typically, a conflict arises between personal motives (to visit relatives, to live with a beloved partner) and ideological persuasions (the belief in socialism or liberal democracy). This article discusses six young adult novels published in East and West Germany in the period from 1958 to 2004 by focusing on economic and ideological attractions as well as the depiction of the German division as a political and social disaster.
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- 2022
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226. Hard shelters: refugee mobility between spatial exclusion and the contemporary problem of temporary living
- Author
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Patrizia Cannas
- Subjects
refugee ,border ,inequalities ,settlement ,temporariness ,Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology ,HT101-395 ,Architecture ,NA1-9428 - Abstract
Considering globalization as a transition of epochs, cities are becoming more and more characterized by differences, contradictions and conflicts, and the topic of mobility is linked to emergency situations due to economic and social crises and armed conflicts. While on the one hand, the possibility of establishing new connections, thanks to the advent of a technological process, has helped to ideally overcome certain boundaries, on the other hand, physical boundaries have become more rigid, marked, and increasingly populated by people who remain excluded from these changes. Mobility can be seen as the root of inequalities for people in transit, and temporary living situations due to processes of overcrowding and depopulation contribute to situations of exclusion.
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- 2022
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227. Crossing the textual frame and its transmedial effects
- Author
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Elżbieta Chrzanowska-Kluczewska
- Subjects
textual frame ,boundary ,border ,yuri lotman ,transcoding ,transmediality ,semiotic collision ,collage ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
The year 2022 marks the 100th anniversary of Juri Lotman’s birth. On this occasion, I propose to return to one of Lotman’s concepts, namely that of frame. The term was proposed in The structure of the artistic text (1970/1977), in the traditional understanding of a limit that separates a text produced in any kind of medium from extra-textual structures (other texts) or non-text (real-life contexts). This notion of frame comes close to its understanding in literary studies, as well as the theory and philosophy of art and should not be confused with a well-known concept of frame propagated in AI Studies (Minsky 1975; Petöfi 1976) and which refers to a global cognitive pattern of storing common-sense knowledge about particular concepts and situations in memory. Lotman returned to the discussion of the textual frame in Universe of the mind (1990), mainly in application to the fine arts. He also elaborated there a more inclusive concept of boundary (proposed in Lotman 1984/2005) as a demarcation of the semiosphere and of its internal subsystems, which necessitates constant translations between particular codes and languages. Lotman dubbed transgressions of textual borders transcoding, which in contemporary parlance is a clear manifestation of transmediality. Therefore, I propose to analyse the concept of frame in relation to Intermedial Studies (cf. Elleström, 2014). Such crossings of boundaries between different media/modes/modalities are simultaneously creative and potentially confusing, in that they display a semiotic collision of artistic codes and require a heightened processing effort on the part of the addressee. My vantage point is basically semiotic, with the focus of interest going less to verbal texts and more to the issues of frame in the visual arts. Semiotic considerations on the problem of boundaries are complemented with brief phenomenologically-oriented ponderings on aesthetic and cognitive import of framing devices (Crowther, 2009) that emphasize their antithetical function as: a) devices with their own artistic value, even complementing the text vs. b) “defences against the exterior” and hindrances to creative liberty. First, I turn to two areas of interest of Lotman himself: 1) the extension of artistic media in Baroque art and 2) collages, which I treat as transmediality through surface. Lotman perceived collages as a collision of the fictitious with the real, referring to their doubly figurative nature (metonymical and metaphorical). Next, I complement this discussion with examples taken from 20th-century painting and sculpture, e.g. Spatialism, Minimalism, and Hyperrealism. Of particular interest is the situation in which the frame becomes a text commenting on its content or plays a metatextual function. Another game worthy of attention is embedding of frames. The discussion closes with the case of transmedial effects between painting and theatre, illustrated by Polish painter and stage-director Tadeusz Kantor’s theatrical experiments in Cracovian Cricot 2 Theatre: a) Velázquez’s Infanta Margarita entering Kantor’s self-portraits and a photo-portrait frame in the performance Today is my birthday (1990); b) Kantor stepping out of the frame of his own self-portrait on the illusory boundary between real life, painting and theatre. The article posits to treat frame and multiple ways of transgressing it as an integrational phenomenon that opens a path for further interdisciplinary studies across the borders of artistic semiotics, Intermedial Studies, literary theorizing and the theory and philosophy of art.
- Published
- 2022
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228. How Refugees Transformed Polish Society During the Past Year (September 2021 – September 2022)
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Stepaniuk, Jakub
- Subjects
migrations ,refugees ,poland ,border ,humanitarian aid ,integration ,Political science ,Social Sciences - Abstract
This work is devoted to exploring different political and social reactions to “refugee crises” occurring at Polish borders with Belarus and Ukraine and reverberating across the country. The research is based on media reports as well as a dozen of interviews conducted with people either affected by the “crisis” geographically or those engaged in humanitarian aid. The key motivation stems from contrasting behaviour of the Polish government and society towards both “crises” as if only Ukrainians were to be helped and not Asian or African refugees who came from the Belarussian side as often portrayed in European discourses. The article attempts to offer more comprehensive explanation than just the argument of racism and cultural distance.
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- 2022
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229. Qing-Southeast Asian Interactions in the Context of Border Control and Sovereignty, 1700s–1800s
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Boyi Boyi Chen (陳博翼) Chen
- Subjects
Qing history ,sovereignty ,security ,Southeast Asia ,border ,History of Asia ,DS1-937 ,Social sciences and state - Asia (Asian studies only) ,H53 - Abstract
This paper discusses Qing China’s interaction with Southeast Asia in the context of border enforcement, that is, the control of movement, and expression of sovereignty. It employs both the imperial logic and the commoners’ daily logic to consider how these three topics interacted with each other in the eighteenth century. I argue that the Qing court considered these issues not in terms of population, territory, or maritime prohibition, but from a standpoint of security and stability, around which the border concerns, ways of controlling people, and sovereignty were all organized. For commoners, simply making a living was the primary concern and the court’s overseas activities had little to do with identity, or an anachronistic concept of sovereignty. The Qing court forbade journeys to Luzon and Batavia, the “barbarian countries” dominated by Spanish and Dutch colonial powers, but intentionally left the door open for commoners to travel to Vietnam. However, when those Chinese people stirred up trouble in Vietnam and returned to the maritime border of China, the Qing government quickly intervened. It had its own logic for enforcing domestic sovereignty and controlling the migration of people between countries.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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230. 'British values'? 'Chinese values'? : governing and reimagining nation through values-based education policies in Britain and Hong Kong
- Author
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Leung, Alvin, Dillabough, Jo-Anne, and Gardner, Philip
- Subjects
323.6071 ,citizenship education ,national education ,Britain ,Hong Kong ,United Kingdom ,British Values ,Chinese Values ,education policy ,policy analysis ,counter-terrorism ,extremism ,radicalisation ,nationalism ,China ,governmentality ,Foucault ,nation ,border ,Prevent ,Moral and National Education ,comparative education ,international education ,migration ,securitisation ,power ,national values ,national culture ,nationhood ,Prevent Duty ,borders ,education policy analysis - Abstract
This dissertation presents research that is broadly concerned with comparative understanding of the concept of citizenship and its relationship to nationhood, most particularly as it relates to contemporary government policies - what Michel Foucault refers to as 'studies of governmentality' - in Britain and Hong Kong. A major consideration is the assessment of how modern states seek to imbue citizenship with new meanings by mobilising connections to reimagined 'national cultures' and 'national values' as a way of expanding power and limiting access to citizenship. Two cases are selected and examined in this research to elucidate the above concern and consideration. The first is Hong Kong, where a compulsory subject Moral and National Education was proposed in 2012 to cultivate students' positive values and enhance their 'national qualities'. The second is Britain, where all schools and universities since 2015 must by law carry out the Prevent Duty to assess the risk of students becoming terrorists and beginning in 2014 where all schools must actively promote 'fundamental British values'. In both contexts, the education policies and their associated discourses claimed to protect 'our culture', defend 'our values', and promote understanding of 'our nation' Curriculum documents, policy documents, and parliamentary reports related to these education policies are collected and critically analysed in a genealogical approach to reveal (a) the expressions of 'national values' and citizenship in these policy and associated political texts, (b) how these texts and associated discourses influenced the re-imagination of nations, and (c) how the national perspectives expressed ideologically - especially in relation to the narrowing of borders through policies - recast, mediate or alter conceptions of citizenship. The comparative policy landscape in Britain and Hong Kong is assessed by deploying an interdisciplinary framework that addresses nation, citizenship, borders, and governmentality in a unique way. The study of the cases, in return, demonstrates how this framework can be applied to analysing education policies and assessing the rationalities and effects of these policies.
- Published
- 2019
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231. Household living conditions and individual behaviours associated with malaria risk: a community-based survey in the Limpopo River Valley, 2020, South Africa.
- Author
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Patrick, Sean M., Bendiane, Marc-Karim, Kruger, Taneshka, Harris, Bernice N., Riddin, Megan A., Trehard, Helene, de Jager, Christiaan, Bornman, Riana, and Gaudart, Jean
- Subjects
- *
MALARIA , *LIVING conditions , *HEALTH behavior , *HOUSEHOLDS , *LOW-income housing - Abstract
Background: Over the past decade, implementation of multiple malaria control strategies in most countries has largely contributed to advance the global malaria elimination agenda. Nevertheless, in some regions, seasonal epidemics may adversely affect the health of local populations. In South Africa, Plasmodium falciparum malaria is still present, with the Vhembe District experiencing an incidence rate of 3.79 cases/1000 person-years in 2018, particularly in the Limpopo River Valley, bordering Zimbabwe. To elucidate the complexity of the mechanisms involved in local regular malaria outbreaks, a community-based survey was implemented in 2020 that focused on the relationship between housing conditions and malaria risky behaviours. Methods: The community-based cross-sectional survey was conducted among the population of three study sites in the Vhembe District, which were selected based on malaria incidence rate, social and health characteristics of inhabitants. The household survey used a random sampling strategy, where data were collected through face-to-face questionnaires and field notes; to described the housing conditions (housing questionnaire), and focus on individual behaviours of household members. Statistical analyses were performed combining hierarchical classifications and logistic regressions. Results: In this study, 398 households were described, covering a population of 1681 inhabitants of all ages, and 439 adults who participated in community-based survey. The analysis of situations at risk of malaria showed that the influence of contextual factors, particularly those defined by the type of habitat, was significant. Housing conditions and poor living environments were factors of malaria exposure and history, regardless of site of investigation, individual preventive behaviours and personal characteristics of inhabitants. Multivariate models showed that, considering all personal characteristics or behaviours of inhabitants, housing conditions such as overcrowding pressures were significantly associated with individual malaria risk. Conclusions: The results showed the overwhelming weight of social and contextual factors on risk situations. Considering the Fundamental Causes Theory, malaria control policies based on health behaviour prevention, should reinforce access to care or promoting health education actions. Overarching economic development interventions in targeted geographical areas and populations have to be implemented, so that malaria control and elimination strategies can be efficiently and effectively managed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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232. World Reaction and the Role of Turkiye, Iran and Asian Countries in Maintaining Qatar Sovereignty: A Case Study of Gulf Crisis.
- Author
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Hairi, Nor Atika
- Subjects
- *
IRAQ-Kuwait Crisis, 1990-1991 , *SOVEREIGNTY - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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233. Deterring transnational migration: public information campaigns, affective governmentality, and the family.
- Author
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Williams, Jill and Coddington, Kate
- Subjects
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FEMINISM , *IMMIGRATION enforcement , *IMMIGRANTS , *GOVERNMENTALITY , *FAMILY reunification - Abstract
Feminist research has illustrated how ideas of the family have been central to projects of border and immigration enforcement, including practices of detention, separation, resettlement, and reunification. This work considers how discourses of family are used to categorize immigrants and refugees, determining access to or exclusion from national territory. Drawing on a comparative study of government-led public information campaigns (PICs) in the United States and Australia, we expand on this research to explore how the family is framed and mobilized in PICs to produce emotional and affective attachments intended to influence migration-related decisions. We argue that PICs function as a form of affective governmentality, working to tether potential migrants to place and render them immobile through the strategic circulation of family-based narratives and images grounded in grief, guilt, shame, and familial responsibility. In doing so, PICs obscure the geopolitical and geoeconomic complexities undergirding transnational migration by rendering migration-related decisions as individual and familial. In tracing how the family is framed and mobilized in PICs, we contribute to existing research on the family in border and immigration enforcement and theories of emotional and affective governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Her Body, Her Choice: Tough Girl Affect, Trump Support, and the 2020 Pandemic.
- Author
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Stümer, Jenny
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *STAY-at-home orders , *PUBLIC demonstrations , *SLOGANS , *AMERICAN women , *FEMININITY - Abstract
When anti-lockdown protests erupted in the United States during the 2020 onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, many right-wing women crudely appropriated the feminist slogan "my body, my choice" in defiance of liberal fears and in support of Donald Trump. Looking at the widely shared image of a young woman holding a sign with the phrase at a rally in Texas, I discuss the communal charge of what I call tough girl affect—a politically saturated vibe, touting a notably youthful, right-wing femininity that is deliberately feisty, fun, and provocative, yet compliant with the hetero-patriarchal agenda of Trump's neoliberal macho politics. I am interested in the way body and choice evoke white femininity as affective strategy, negotiating a public feeling of privileged belonging to the nation. The article works through the tenets of body, border, and nation as central to this investment, suggesting that the tough girl image mobilizes femininity to affectively strengthen conservatism, whiteness, and homeland in the face of the pandemic. Staging a fantasy of impunity, the tough girl intimates the invincible conservative body in opposition to the porous emotionality of feeble liberals. At the same time, the spectacle of white femininity necessarily fuels national fears of permeability and hence charges negative (even fatal) attachments to fantasmatic sovereignty. While mobilizing vulnerability to energize femininity, whiteness, and borders, the image ultimately exposes the compromised bargains of living and dying in (Trump's) America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Iniciativa Conjunta México y Estados Unidos: pandemia de COVID-19 y frontera segura.
- Author
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Ramos-García, José-María
- Subjects
MEXICO-United States relations ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health ,INTERNET governance ,NATIONAL security ,UNITED States presidential election, 2020 ,GEOGRAPHIC boundaries - Abstract
Copyright of URVIO - Revista Latinoamericana de Seguridad Ciudadana is the property of FLACSO - Ecuador (Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Transboundary Planning and Governance: from challenge to solution in times of crises?
- Author
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Purkarthofer, Eva and Humer, Alois
- Abstract
This article introduces the AESOP Thematic Group "Transboundary Planning and Governance" and its recent organisational and thematic changes. It also scans recent research from the viewpoint of two interlinked key dimensions of transboundary planning and governance: scale and scope. By doing so, the article aims to highlight promising research perspectives related to transboundary and integrated planning, crossing administrative borders and siloes respectively. This is especially relevant with a view to the multiple crises society is currently facing. To date, transboundary planning and governance is often portrayed through the challenges it is facing. However, as this article argues, there is a need to move forward and focus on how the transboundary setting -- often more flexible and malleable than other governance contexts -- can make a contribution to address current crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
237. La lucha en tiempos de crisis. Un repaso descriptivo a la mística del Movimento dos Sem Terra en Santana do Livramento, Brasil.
- Author
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Gau de Mello, Alejandro and Cabrera, Roberto
- Subjects
SOCIAL movements ,MYSTICISM ,TWENTIETH century ,FIELD research ,INTENTION - Abstract
Copyright of Crítica y Resistencias: Revista de conflictos sociales latinoamericanos is the property of Fundacion El llano - Centro de Estudios Politicos y Sociales de America Latina (CEPSAL) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
238. Circulation of Pestiviruses in Small Ruminants from Greece: First Molecular Identification of Border Disease Virus.
- Author
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Bouzalas, Ilias G., Gelasakis, Athanasios I., Chassalevris, Taxiarchis, Apostolidi, Evangelia D., Pappas, Fotis, Ekateriniadou, Loukia, Boukouvala, Evridiki, and Zdragas, Antonios
- Subjects
PESTE des petits ruminants ,VIRUS diseases ,RUMINANTS ,PESTIVIRUS diseases ,VIRAL antigens ,SHEEP ranches - Abstract
The incidence of small ruminant pestivirus infections in Greece remains unknown as they have not been diagnosed in the country since 1974 when the most recent Border Disease Virus (BDV) outbreak was reported. The objective of our study was to explore the possible occurrence of pestiviral infections among sheep and goat farms in Greece and to further determine the variants of major concern. Thus, serum samples were collected from 470 randomly selected animals belonging to 28 different flocks/herds. ELISA on p80 antibody revealed the existence of seropositive animals in four out of the 24 studied sheep flocks, whereas all the goats in the four studied herds were seronegative. Viral RNA and antigens were detected in two sheep out of the four seropositive flocks by RT-PCR and ELISA, respectively. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis showed that the newly identified Greek variants were closely related to the strains of the BDV-4 genotype. One of the BDV-positive sheep demonstrated the diagnostic profile of a persistently infected (PI) animal, providing additional information regarding the source of the infection. This is the first molecular identification of BDV isolates in Greece. Our findings indicate that BDV infections are likely to remain undiagnosed, highlighting the need for further epidemiological studies and active surveillance programs to determine the prevalence and impact of BDV infections on a countrywide level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. "If your mother does not teach you, the world will...": a qualitative study of parent-adolescent communication on sexual and reproductive health issues in Border districts of eastern Uganda.
- Author
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Ndugga, Patricia, Kwagala, Betty, Wandera, Stephen Ojiambo, Kisaakye, Peter, Mbonye, Martin K., and Ngabirano, Fred
- Subjects
- *
UNSAFE sex , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *PARENT-child relationships , *BOUNDARY disputes , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases - Abstract
Background: Adolescents experience a host of sexual and reproductive health (SRH) challenges, with detrimental SRH and socio-economic consequences. These include early sexual debut, sexually transmitted infections including HIV/AIDS, teenage pregnancy, and early childbearing. Parent-adolescent communication about SRH has significant potential to reduce adolescents' risky sexual behaviors. However, communication between parents and adolescents is limited. This study explored the facilitators and barriers to parent-adolescent communication about sexual and reproductive health. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study in the border districts of Busia and Tororo in Eastern Uganda. Data collection entailed 8 Focus Group Discussions comprising of parents, adolescents (10–17 years), and 25 key informants. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and translated into English. Thematic analysis was conducted with the aid of NVIVO 12 software. Results: Participants acknowledged the key role parents play in communicating SRH matters; however, only a few parents engage in such discussions. Facilitators of parent-adolescent communication were: having a good parent-child relationship which makes parents approachable and motivates children to discuss issues openly, a closer bond between mothers and children which is partly attributed to gender roles and expectations eases communication, and having parents with high education making them more knowledgeable and confident when discussing SRH issues with children. However, the discussions are limited by cultural norms that treat parent-child conversations on SRH as a taboo, parents' lack of knowledge, and parents busy work schedules made them unavailable to address pertinent SRH issues. Conclusion: Parents' ability to communicate with their children is hindered by cultural barriers, busy work schedules, and a lack of knowledge. Engaging all stakeholders including parents to deconstruct sociocultural norms around adolescent SRH, developing the capacity of parents to confidently initiate and convey accurate SRH information, initiation of SRH discussions at early ages, and integrating parent-adolescent communication into parenting interventions, are potential strategies to improve SRH communication between parents and adolescents in high-risk settings such as borders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Nature protection in the Polish-Slovakian borderland during the 20th century.
- Author
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Więckowski, Marek
- Subjects
- *
NATURE conservation , *HISTORICAL geography , *NATURE reserves , *BIOSPHERE reserves , *TWENTIETH century , *TRANSBOUNDARY waters , *BORDERLANDS - Abstract
The extension of legal protection to natural areas has often been artificially confined within the borders of given countries. The border between Poland and Slovakia offers a very good example of this. While the very beginnings of this trend date back to the eighteenth century, it was here in the 1930s that early cross-border cooperation made its appearance. The solutions arrived at justifying their pioneering status, by the standards of Europe and the globe. Initiatives included the establishment in the Pieniny Mountains of Europe's first (and the world's second) transboundary protected area, as well as the founding of a world-first tripartite UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in the Eastern Carpathians. The article outlines the development of the areas under legal protection from their origins through to the eve of the accessions of Poland and Slovakia to the European Union. It draws on legal documents and analyses of scientific works, regarding the dilemmas associated with the founding of protected areas, and interviews with the administrations of the protected areas concerned. Emphasis is laid on the geopolitics of historic cross-border conservation and cooperation. • Explores the intersection between border geographies and historical nature preservation. • Studies how legally protected natural areas took shape over five periods in the twentieth century. • Demonstrates that borders isolate conservation communities and prevent cooperation. • Explains the idea of Europe's first transboundary Parks and the world's oldest tripartite Biosphere Reserve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Border countervisuality: smartphone videos of border crossing and migration.
- Author
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Bayramoğlu, Yener
- Subjects
- *
BORDER crossing , *SMARTPHONES , *DIGITAL video , *VIDEOS , *DIGITAL technology , *EMPATHY , *JOY - Abstract
This article explores how smartphone videos produced by migrants during border crossings challenge Eurocentric visualizations of borders. Implementing video analysis and iconographic interpretation, I explore three interrelated aspects of the smartphone videos: (1) By circulating videos via digital platforms, migrants create a countervisuality of border crossing that destabilizes the visual politics that shape current border regimes. (2) Unlike journalistic, humanitarian, or surveillance-oriented visual images produced from above, from a safe distance, from rescue or patrol ships, migrants' smartphone footage puts their own narratives at the center of visualization. (3) Whereas Eurocentric visualizations of migration and borders aim to elicit affects and emotions such as pity, empathy, fear, or panic, migrants' smartphone videos depict emotions such as joy and happiness after successful border crossings. These affective visualizations of individual migration stories confound binary representations of migrants as either victims or invaders. I argue that the shaky smartphone videos with their wandering focus and disordered mode of vision create a productive vantage point for seeing and sensing a world that is unimaginable for the normative, focused lens that structures views projected by journalism, humanitarian appeals, political mobilization, and surveillance technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. LE MUSÉE DES PROPHÉTIES DE KREMNA (SERBIE OCCIDENTALE) AU CROISEMENT DES FRONTIÈRES ET DES PATRIMOINES.
- Author
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Valtchinova, Galia
- Abstract
The paper is focused on Kremna, a village in Western Serbia close to the Serbian-Bosnian border where a series of prophetic pronouncements, recorded and publicized in the early 20
th century, gained momentum during the demise of Yugoslavia and are undergoing a process of heritage-making. It builds on two kinds of ethnography: visits of the field “site” which is the Museum/Memorial of the Prophecy”, and an ethnography of a main road which crosses the state border and relates two former Yugoslav countries. The first and longer part of the paper is dedicated to Kremna, its prophets, the prophecies and to those promoting it as the “Serbian Delphi”. It first outlines the local context and the history of the purportedly prophetic pronouncements subsequently known by the name of the village. It uncovers the logic and the circumstances in which the Kremna prophecies have been brought to public knowledge, to become a banner of Serbian national aspirations and during the last decades, of nationalism. A special section is dedicated to the legitimation of local prophets and the inscription of their work in the longue durée history as well as in cosmic processes. The second part evolves around the ethnography of the road Užice-Višegrad, Kremna being half way from both. It helps to grasp the overall landscape of history- memory- and heritage sites, the dynamics of their intertwining, and the creation of a kind of symbolic grammar of events, personae and cultural items which impacts the historical imagination. Throughout the paper, attention is paid to the importance of border and of boundaries broadly speaking in the microareas where outspoken national prophets are born and have lived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
243. ENTRE BONS USAGES ET NOUVEAUX VOISINAGES. PATRIMOINE(S) ET FRONTIÈRE(S) DANS LA RÉGION DE STRANDZHA (BULGARIE).
- Author
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Givre, Olivier
- Abstract
Focusing on the Bulgarian side, the article addresses the post-socialist heritage dynamics which value the border dimension of the Strandzha area, shared between Bulgaria and Turkey since 1913. Strandzha’s location at the south-eastern edges of Bulgaria, and on the delineation of the former iron curtain, has shaped the idea of an isolate, but also a natural and cultural “conservatory”, to be protected from external harms. The image of Strandzha oscillates between the two poles of a shelter-territory and a movement place, a space of autochthony and anchorage. The border symbolizes thus a spatial and cultural rip, calling for the reassertion of the “qualities” of a marginalized space. The article scrutinizes the building of a “sense of heritage” in this border area, laying on the ambivalent feelings of the loss of its geographical and cultural unity, and of its preserved authenticity against all odds. This heritage dimension resonates with the assessment of an uninterrupted decline, delayed by the state interventionism during the socialist period, but worsened by the post-socialist upheavals and posing sharp interrogations about its future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
244. LES ÉCHELLES SPATIO-TEMPORELLES DES PRATIQUES DE LA FRONTIÈRE. MOBILITÉS, MÉMOIRES, ET DÉVELOPPEMENT URBAIN DANS LE BANAT ROUMAIN (JIMBOLIA).
- Author
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Botea, Bianca
- Abstract
I propose here to look at the transformations of a border landscape of a small town (Jimbolia, Romania), in a context of border opening after 1989 and industrial crisis. I focus my attention on the role of the border in the social configurations of the city, both at the level of the daily practices of its inhabitants (and tourists), and at the level of the urban renewal. I also examine the extensible social spaces that are created around the use and crossing of this border and I show the time-space scales of these territories of circulation. I show that they mobilize networks of kinship, language and more broadly ethnic, as well as the memory processes. The text opens up to methodological and epistemological aspects concerning the “multi-site ethnography” of borders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
245. Z DZIEJÓW GRANICY PRL - ZSRR PO II WOJNIE ŚWIATOWEJ. WYBRANE PRZYPADKI KONTRABANDY ORAZ NIELEGALNEGO PRZEKRACZANIA LINII GRANICZNEJ.
- Author
-
Olechowski, Piotr
- Abstract
Copyright of Studies in Politics & Society / Polityka & Społeczeństwo is the property of University of Rzeszow and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Granica jako zasób, granica jako wehikuł czasu. Społeczne reprezentacje diaspor na pograniczu rosyjsko-chińskim.
- Author
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SZMYT, ZBIGNIEW
- Abstract
Copyright of Studia Migracyjne Przegląd Polonijny is the property of Wydzial Studiow Miedzynarodowych i Politycznych UJ oraz Polska Akademia Umiejetnosci and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Urban spectacularisation and social housing : an asymmetrical relation ? The habitations Jeanne-Mance in Montreal's quartier des spectacles.
- Author
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Margier, Antonin and Ethier, Guillaume
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC art , *HOUSING , *METROPOLIS - Abstract
Located in the heart of Montreal's Quartier des Spectacles, the Habitations Jeanne-Mance is a vast social housing scheme that contrasts starkly with the Quebec metropolis's cultural showcase. However, despite their differences, these urban projects have been subject to similar beautification practices. Both have drawn on public art and culture as resources, but the two beautification processes have taken different forms. In the Quartier des Spectacles, they have been aimed at attracting audiences, while in the Habitations Jeanne-Mance, they have sought to reinforce a sense of belonging. In this article, we analyse how these symbolic recoding processes have interconnected and overlapped. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. The Net Benefits and Residual Cost from U.S. Border Management of the Initially Inadmissible.
- Author
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Farrow, Scott
- Subjects
BORDER security ,NET present value ,VALUE (Economics) ,DECISION making ,PRICES ,UNDOCUMENTED immigrants - Abstract
Border management is a government activity affecting immigration and the economy. Benefit–cost and equivalent decision analyses are used to evaluate U.S. border management for 2017. Controversial issues arise. Among these are the issue of standing and the values of asylum, a criminal career, child custodial care, foreign deaths, fiscal and labor market effects, and distributional weighting. Sixteen unique shadow prices (imputed marginal value) are computed. Those shadow pries are combined with proportions and levels of border management outcomes. The aggregate result is not only a large expected present value net benefit per year from managed outcomes of $46.6 billion but also a large residual unmanaged annual cost of $23.7 billion. Significant uncertainty exists, but estimated net benefits remain positive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Cattle, Viral Invasions, and State-Society Relations in a Colonial Korean Borderland.
- Author
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Seeley, Joseph
- Subjects
BORDERLANDS ,TRAVEL restrictions ,KOREANS ,SOCIAL impact ,CATTLE ,HISTORY of colonies - Abstract
For early twentieth-century Koreans, one of the most feared invaders to breach the country's northern border with China was the tiny viral pathogen Rinderpest morbillivirus (rinderpest, or cattle plague). This study examines the social consequences of rinderpest outbreaks along the colonial Sino-Korean border and the methods undertaken by the Japanese Government-General of Korea to control viral "invasions" from Manchuria. Rinderpest prevention primarily functioned as an extension of the colonial police. Despite universal fears of rinderpest's ravages, which devastated a rural economy dependent on animal labor, colonized Koreans exhibited wide-ranging reactions to the heavy-handed methods adopted by imperial officials to fight the disease. Korean responses included outright resistance such as cross-border cattle smuggling, attacking veterinary officials, or protests against livestock travel bans, as well as varying degrees of cooperation. Moving chronologically from before the beginning of formal colonial rule in 1910 until the 1930s, this article strives to explain how a modern veterinary regime was implemented and negotiated in the northern colonial Korean borderland. Such a view is essential for understanding not only Korea's colonial past but also Korean responses to infectious disease "invasions" in the present day. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. How relative marginal tax rates affect establishment entry at state borders.
- Author
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Chen, Yulong, Duncan, Kevin D., Ma, Liyuan, and Orazem, Peter F.
- Subjects
TAX rates ,INCOME ,PROPERTY tax ,STATE taxation ,BORDER crossing ,CAPITAL levy ,TAX reform - Abstract
We apply border discontinuity analysis to measure the impact of marginal tax rates on capital income, property, sales, and income on establishment entry on either side of state borders. Establishments are more likely to enter on the side of the border with the lower marginal tax rates. The biggest differences in start-up rates are at borders with the largest tax rate differences, with property tax rate differences mattering most. We rank borders by the differences in start-ups due to tax structure, and we rank states by their distortionary tax structures. The greatest distortion in start-ups due to tax rates is at the Wyoming-Idaho border with an 8.6% lower probability of start-ups on the Idaho side. The most distortionary tax structure is Rhode Island's at 14.2% lower probability of entry, but it is not as heavily disadvantaged at the border because its neighbor, Connecticut, has the third most distortionary tax structure. Plain English Summary: State tax rates affect start-ups at state borders. State taxes on property, sales, personal income, and corporate income affect the side of the border start-ups tend to select. A state with a one-point higher tax rate in each of the four taxes will have a 3.2% lower probability of a start-up than its neighboring state. Property taxes have the greatest adverse effect on start-ups because new firms must pay property taxes, even if they have no sales or income. The greatest distortion in start-ups due to tax rates is Wyoming's 8.6% advantage compared to Idaho. Some states with the most distortionary tax structures are not disadvantaged at their borders because their neighbors also have high tax rates. Rhode Island has the most distortionary tax structure, but it is not as heavily disadvantaged at the border because its neighbor, Connecticut, has the third most distortionary tax structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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