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Borders and Walls

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Title: Borders and Walls


1
Borders and Walls
  • Boundary. n. In political geography, an imaginary
    line between two nations, separating the
    imaginary rights of one from the imaginary rights
    of the other.
  • Ambrose Bierce, The Devils Dictionary, 1911.

2
Borders, Boundaries and Frontiers
  • Borders, boundaries and frontiers are sometimes
    used interchangeably. But a legalistic definition
    is that
  • A boundary is a line separating states
  • A frontier connotes a zone, having therefore
    width as well as length
  • (a border therefore can be either a line or a
    zone)

3
History of the Concept
  • In ancient Greece, imperial Rome and in the
    Middle Ages the concept of border zones
    predominated over fixed-line boundaries.
  • Roman limes debate about how fixed this was
  • Early Germanic peoples had no concept or word for
    frontier in a linear sense mark (march) or
    forst (forest) used instead. March meant edge
    or margin. They became more institutionalised
    over the Middle Ages.

4
  • The notion of a strict, linear boundary is a
    relatively modern conception, the need for
    defined boundaries arising as states developed in
    the post-Westphalian era and populations expanded
    into border areas and communicated across border
    lines. Exact boundaries, however, could only
    develop when map-making and geographic techniques
    were sufficiently advanced to facilitate
    delimitations and demarcation.
  • Malcolm Shaw, Title to territory in Africa
    international legal issues, p. 224

5
Language Issues
  • Some in Britain use words interchangeably.
  • America boundary is the limiting line frontier
    is the part of a country that borders on another.
  • French frontière is boundary line or border zone.
  • Same with German Grenzen.

6
Boundaries and Frontiers
  • Frontier is broader than just a geographical line
    it is a zone, with people living in it.
  • Gottman, The Significance of Territory, p. 134.
  • frontiers and boundaries are respectively the
    zones and lines which separate areas of different
    political activity.
  • Prescott, Political Geography, p. 54.

7
Why the Change?
  • People and land as significant taxable assets
  • Sovereignty over land rather than affiliation of
    people
  • Security of political power
  • Tidying up exercise i.e. French conception of
    frontières naturelles, emphasised by Jean Bodin
    in political philosophy, Richelieu in political
    practice and Vauban in military practice and
    economic theory (see Gottman, p. 34).
  • Cardinal Richelieu, Testament Politique les
    limites naturelles of France Rhine, Alps,
    Pyrenees.
  • Advances in geometry and cartography

8
  • Frontiers have no physical reality unless they
    happen to be marked or fortified. But, in the
    long run, that is neither a necessary, nor indeed
    a sufficient, condition for having a frontier. A
    frontier exists by virtue of assumptions, shared
    by people on either side of it, about where the
    frontier is located, and in the long run, about
    the acceptability of this location.
  • Andrew Osiander, The States System of Europe
    1640-1990 Peacemaking and the Conditions of
    International Stability, Oxford Clarendon Press,
    1994, p. 5.

9
  • As the medieval juridical line became converted
    to a modern boundary its whole nature changed
    it separated political territories one from
    another. Cartography reflected this change with
    the rivers and towns that feature so prominently
    on early sixteenth-century maps being replaced by
    political boundaries on early seventeenth-century
    maps. Interritoriality had arrived such
    depictions of absolute spaces have a direct
    lineage to the modern world political map.
  • Peter J. Taylor, Beyond Containers
    Internationality, Interstateness,
    Interterritoriality, Progress in Human
    Geography, Vol 19 No 1, March 1995, p. 9.

10
Taxonomy of Frontiers
  • Two main types of frontiers
  • political (separate individual states)
  • settlement (developed from undeveloped).
  • But the first of these are rare these days.
    Usually a temporary measure (ie US/Canada, de
    facto limit of sovereignty).
  • Secondary do still exist (i.e. desert/polar
    regions undeveloped due to technical lack).

11
Changing Frontiers
  • Annexation and conquest
  • Marches become permanent (military zones to
    defend, became states)
  • Buffer states
  • Spheres of interest/influence (satellite states)
  • Formal treaties imposed by external powers,
    negotiated settlements, UN, etc.
  • Inherit boundaries of colonies on independence

12
Stages of Boundary Making
  • Allocation, general shape, straight lines,
    coordinates of latitude/longitude
  • Delimitation, selection of specific boundary
    sites
  • Demarcation, marked by pillars, cleared vistas,
    fences, etc.
  • (Management)

13
  • 1907 Romanes Lecture on the subject of Frontiers
    by Lord Curzon of Kedleston, Viceroy of India
    (1898-1905) and British Foreign Secretary 1919-24
  • http//www-ibru.dur.ac.uk/docs/curzon1.html

14
Some Examples
  • US-Canadian border
  • Kenya-Tanzania
  • Ethiopia-Eritrea
  • Antarctica
  • Iraq-Syria
  • Botswana Kalahari desert
  • US-Mexico
  • Israel-Lebanon, Israel-Syria, West Bank wall
  • Swaziland-South Africa
  • Hong Kong-China

15
The American War of Independence ended in 1783
with a humiliating defeat for Britain. The red
line was used by the British negotiating for
peace with the Americans to demonstrate their
interpretation of the boundary between the United
States and the provinces which later formed
Canada. The map was presented to George III to
show him how the proposed boundaries might work.
16
  • These boundaries were, in the event, never put
    into practice. As the map was not included in the
    final treaty and as it was found to be inaccurate
    anyway further arbitration was later required.
    This means that, as shown on the modern map of
    the area, the boundaries today differ from those
    proposed on the 'Red Lined Map'.
  • Text and maps on last 2 slides taken from
    www.bl.uk/whatson/exhibitions/ lieland/m3-0-1.html
    (link now dead)

17
US-Canadian Border Mid-West
Drummond Island
Windsor, Ontario
18
US-Canada
  • The 49th-parallel boundary between Canada and
    the United States is considered antecedent in
    terms of its relationship to subsequent
    colonisation (its superimposed nature in terms of
    the indigenous populations over which it passed
    being generally neglected). Like other
    geometrical boundaries, it is unrelated to
    underlying patterns of terrain, and though the
    boundary was politically acceptable to both
    parties the International Joint Commission was
    concerned with problems involving no less than
    fourteen rivers and lakes crossing this
    boundary.
  • Richard Muir, Modern Political Geography,
    London Macmillan, 1981, pp. 132-3.

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20
US-Canadian Border West Side
21
Africa
  • Divisions in Africa are largely fictitious,
    with the borders imposed by the European.
  • Uti possidetis inherit boundaries of colonies
    on independence seen also especially in South
    America.
  • In some cases the flanking states have never
    been able to agree on another line more closely
    related to the landscape in others the line
    traverses through unattractive deserts where the
    states concerned have no present intention of
    developing. In East Africa straight boundaries
    were preserved between Kenya and Tanganyika
    because both were under British Administration.
  • Prescott, Political Geography, p. 63

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Ethiopia-Eritrea
  • The boundary between Ethiopia and Eritrea has
    been disputed for many years, and was poorly
    delimited and demarcated.
  • Between 1998 and 2000 a war was fought between
    the two countries over this boundary.
  • Following an arbitration process an independent
    boundary commission published a delimitation
    decision in April 2002 and sought to commence
    demarcation of the boundary on the ground.

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Ethiopia-Eritrea
  • However, Ethiopia objected to aspects of the
    delimitation - in particular the fact that the
    boundary placed the village of Badme (where the
    boundary dispute first erupted) within Eritrea -
    and has refused to cooperate in the demarcation
    process.
  • The two sides are still in dispute. The boundary
    commission has used aerial photography to
    identify points at which boundary pillars should
    be erected unless the parties agree otherwise.
    They proposed that if no agreement was reached by
    the end of November 2007 the boundary
    'demarcated' by the commission will become
    legally binding. But Ethiopia still occupies
    Badme the resolution has not been reached and
    skirmishes continue.

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British Mandate from Ottoman Empire
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Sykes-Picot agreement
41
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vi357G1HuFcI
42
BBC News June, 25 July, 22 August, 10
September, 13 October
43
Financial Times
44
  • https//info.publicintelligence.net/DoS-Syria-ISIL
    .pdf

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47
Iraqi and Syrian Towns and Cities seized by the
Islamic State and its allies
  • https//maps.google.com/maps/u/0/ms?ieUTF8hlen
    oeUTF8msa0msid206503076099972915830.0004fb810
    21906110e889tmsourceembedll34.939985,41.6162
    11spn6.302619,12.304687z6dgfeature

48
Botswana and Kalahari desert
  • Indigenous San or Basarwa people of this area,
    often known as the Bushmen conflict between
    their sense of space and the government of
    Botswana
  • Central Kalahari Game Reserve
  • Created 1961
  • Independence 1966, new settlements created
    outside the reserve
  • Key issues
  • Wildlife in reserve
  • Diamonds
  • Two different spatial logics
  • 2006 court ruling that eviction was illegal and
    that they could return

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50
The End of Borders?
  • In the 1990s, following the end of the Cold War,
    there was talk of the end of territory,
    deterritorialisation, or the end of borders.
  • Europe Schengenland
  • Global flows of goods, people, capital and labour

51
A rebordered world?
  • US-Mexico border, and US-Canadian border
  • Israels wall/fence/border/security barrier in
    the West Bank
  • Other borders being fenced across the world

52
http//shelf3d.com/Search/Uploaded20by20CCIGchan
nel
53
Two decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall,
why are leading democracies like the United
States, India and Israel building massive walls
and fences on their borders? Despite predictions
of a borderless world through globalization,
these three countries alone have built an
astonishing combined total of 5,700 kilometers of
security barriers. In this groundbreaking work,
Reece Jones analyzes how these controversial
border security projects were justified in their
respective countries, what consequences these
physical barriers have on the lives of those
living in these newly securitized spaces, and
what long-term effects the hardening of political
borders will have in these societies and
globally. Border Walls is a bold, important
intervention that demonstrates that the exclusion
and violence necessary to secure the borders of
the modern state often undermine the very ideals
of freedom and democracy they are meant to
protect.
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