Linked e-resources
Details
Table of Contents
Intro
Preface
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Identities, Borders and Orders in Central and Eastern Europe
1.1 Research Questions
1.1.1 Main Questions
1.1.2 Subsidiary Questions
1.2 Book Contributions and Chapter Outline
1.3 Chapter Outline
References
Chapter 2: Conceptualising the Borderscape
2.1 Over-generalisation and Over-specification
2.1.1 Conceptualising the Borderscape
2.2 Constituting the Borderscape: A Framework for Analysis (& Representation)
2.2.1 Features, Discourses and Practices
2.3 Distinguishing and Contextualising the Borderscape: An Interpretive Framework
2.3.1 Distinguishing a Borderscape: The Intersection of (In)Security and (Im)Mobility
2.3.2 Contextualising the Borderscape: Identities-Borderscapes-Orders
2.4 Socio-political Underpinnings of the Borderscape
2.4.1 Mobilising Security in Word and Deed
2.4.2 Power, Resistance and the Limits of the Social
2.5 Spatialities of the Borderscape
2.5.1 Space and Subjectivity
2.5.2 Performative Placemaking
2.5.3 Territory and Materiality
2.5.4 Space/Power/Knowledge
2.6 Temporalities and Particularities of the CEE Borderscape
2.6.1 A Particular Europe
2.6.2 Historicism at the End of History
2.6.3 Histories ́Ends
2.6.4 Memory Contra History?
2.7 The Conceptualised Borderscape: Analysable, Interpretable, Researchable
References
Chapter 3: Interpretively Researching the CEE Borderscape
3.1 Elements of an Interpretive Methodology
3.2 A Particular Research Journey
3.2.1 From Dissatisfied Practitioner to Critical Academic
3.2.2 From Critical Academic to Post-critical Researcher
3.3 Mapping the Borderscape
3.3.1 Mapping an Emerging Concept
3.3.2 Mapping Sites, Actors and Settings
3.3.3 Conducting Interpretive Research
3.3.4 Research Skills, Phases and Sensibilities
3.3.5 Deskwork Methods
3.3.6 Fieldwork Methods
3.4 Reflexive, Post-critical Interpretive Research
3.4.1 Negotiating Access, Negotiating Proximity
3.4.2 Sense(s) of Doubt
References
Chapter 4: A Diverse Archipelago: Borderscape Features
4.1 Firewalls: Internal Control in a Schengen State
4.1.1 Mobile Police Controls
4.1.2 Inconvenient, But Not Oppressive Bureaucracy
4.2 Shadows: Bordering Between Schengen States
4.2.1 Shadow Policing at Intra-Schengen Frontiers
4.2.2 Twilight Zones
4.3 A Filter (Not a Fortress)
4.3.1 Border Constructions
4.3.2 Local Border Traffic
4.4 The Visa `Curtain-Wall ́
4.4.1 Consular Remote-Control
4.4.2 Behind the Curtain-Wall: 2nd Class Europe
4.5 Twisted Mirrors: EU Bordering in Ukraine
4.5.1 Externalised Border Mirrors
4.5.2 Twisted Mirrors in an Uncanny Borderland
4.6 A Diverse Archipelago of Border Features
References
Chapter 5: Euro-renovations: Borderscape Discourses
Preface
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Identities, Borders and Orders in Central and Eastern Europe
1.1 Research Questions
1.1.1 Main Questions
1.1.2 Subsidiary Questions
1.2 Book Contributions and Chapter Outline
1.3 Chapter Outline
References
Chapter 2: Conceptualising the Borderscape
2.1 Over-generalisation and Over-specification
2.1.1 Conceptualising the Borderscape
2.2 Constituting the Borderscape: A Framework for Analysis (& Representation)
2.2.1 Features, Discourses and Practices
2.3 Distinguishing and Contextualising the Borderscape: An Interpretive Framework
2.3.1 Distinguishing a Borderscape: The Intersection of (In)Security and (Im)Mobility
2.3.2 Contextualising the Borderscape: Identities-Borderscapes-Orders
2.4 Socio-political Underpinnings of the Borderscape
2.4.1 Mobilising Security in Word and Deed
2.4.2 Power, Resistance and the Limits of the Social
2.5 Spatialities of the Borderscape
2.5.1 Space and Subjectivity
2.5.2 Performative Placemaking
2.5.3 Territory and Materiality
2.5.4 Space/Power/Knowledge
2.6 Temporalities and Particularities of the CEE Borderscape
2.6.1 A Particular Europe
2.6.2 Historicism at the End of History
2.6.3 Histories ́Ends
2.6.4 Memory Contra History?
2.7 The Conceptualised Borderscape: Analysable, Interpretable, Researchable
References
Chapter 3: Interpretively Researching the CEE Borderscape
3.1 Elements of an Interpretive Methodology
3.2 A Particular Research Journey
3.2.1 From Dissatisfied Practitioner to Critical Academic
3.2.2 From Critical Academic to Post-critical Researcher
3.3 Mapping the Borderscape
3.3.1 Mapping an Emerging Concept
3.3.2 Mapping Sites, Actors and Settings
3.3.3 Conducting Interpretive Research
3.3.4 Research Skills, Phases and Sensibilities
3.3.5 Deskwork Methods
3.3.6 Fieldwork Methods
3.4 Reflexive, Post-critical Interpretive Research
3.4.1 Negotiating Access, Negotiating Proximity
3.4.2 Sense(s) of Doubt
References
Chapter 4: A Diverse Archipelago: Borderscape Features
4.1 Firewalls: Internal Control in a Schengen State
4.1.1 Mobile Police Controls
4.1.2 Inconvenient, But Not Oppressive Bureaucracy
4.2 Shadows: Bordering Between Schengen States
4.2.1 Shadow Policing at Intra-Schengen Frontiers
4.2.2 Twilight Zones
4.3 A Filter (Not a Fortress)
4.3.1 Border Constructions
4.3.2 Local Border Traffic
4.4 The Visa `Curtain-Wall ́
4.4.1 Consular Remote-Control
4.4.2 Behind the Curtain-Wall: 2nd Class Europe
4.5 Twisted Mirrors: EU Bordering in Ukraine
4.5.1 Externalised Border Mirrors
4.5.2 Twisted Mirrors in an Uncanny Borderland
4.6 A Diverse Archipelago of Border Features
References
Chapter 5: Euro-renovations: Borderscape Discourses