Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7493505 | Political Geography | 2014 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
This article examines how Thai-Burma border residents are enrolled and engaged in remaking the political border through their knowledge practices and performances, or their own “borderwork”. Border residents do not perform this work alone, but in connection with other actors including environmental consultants. In order to highlight this co-production of the political border, I bring together border studies scholarship that see borders as process and performance with work in science studies that has highlighted the way that knowledge and order are co-produced. The importance of this approach is that it facilitates an understanding of the multifaceted and contradictory work to remake the border by multiple actors, a way to study “borders from the bottom up” that illustrates how the border is continually enacted. While this article puts forth the notion that the border represents an important site and process of struggle and negotiation in which marginalized communities invest, it also questions the assumption that because residents are engaged in remaking the border, the border is necessarily more 'democratic'. The discussion and empirical data presented in this article also speak to broader debates in political geography about how borders are remade through practice and performance.
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Social Sciences and Humanities
Arts and Humanities
History
Authors
Vanessa Lamb,