The mobile border hypothesis highlights the idea that borders are more than demarcation lines dividing the territories of neatly bounded nation-states. As Étienne Balibar (2004) argues, borders and their various regimes increasingly disperse across different socio-political arenas and can no longer exclusively be connected to the physical limits of nation-state territoriality.
(2015). Mobile Euro/African Borderscapes: Migrant Communities and Shifting Urban Margins [book chapter - capitolo di libro]. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/62318
Mobile Euro/African Borderscapes: Migrant Communities and Shifting Urban Margins
Brambilla, Chiara
2015-01-01
Abstract
The mobile border hypothesis highlights the idea that borders are more than demarcation lines dividing the territories of neatly bounded nation-states. As Étienne Balibar (2004) argues, borders and their various regimes increasingly disperse across different socio-political arenas and can no longer exclusively be connected to the physical limits of nation-state territoriality.File allegato/i alla scheda:
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