Beschreibung:
[FRONT COVER, place in the white band along the bottom of the front cover] Gold Winner, Association for Borderland Studies Past Presidents' Book Award, 2011 [BACK COVER] [place at top of back cover] 'Border Politics' is a wonderfully ambitious book, which outlines alternative conceptualizations of the border while avoiding the clichéd themes of geopolitical border studies. [...] This is an agenda-setting book, both in terms of demonstrating how new and challenging ideas can be incorporated into border studies, and more importantly, in leading the way in thinking the problem of the border afresh in order to understand the diversity of bordering strategies which exist in world politics.' ABS Book Awards 2011, Association for Borderlands Studies [place as on hbk, below red dots] 'Offers a significant contribution to debates about borders that deserves wide-spread attention.' John Williams, University of Durham 'An urgently needed book.' Yosef Lapid, New Mexico State University This book presents a distinctive theoretical approach to the problem of borders in the study of global politics. It turns from current debates about the presence or absence of borders between states to consider the possibility that the concept of the border of the state is being reconfigured in contemporary political life. The author uses critical resources found in poststructuralist thought to think in new ways about the relationship between borders, security and sovereign power, drawing on a range of thinkers including Agamben, Derrida and Foucault. He highlights the necessity of a more pluralized and radicalised view of what borders are and where they might be found and uses the problem of borders to critically explore the innovations and limits of poststructuralist scholarship. Nick Vaughan-Williams is Associate Professor of International Security at the University of Warwick, UK. He is co-author of /Critical Security Studies: An Introduction/ (2010), and co-editor of /Critica
Introduction; 1. Borders are Not What or Where They are Supposed to Be: Security, Territory, Law; 2. The Study of Borders in Global Politics: From Geopolitics to Biopolitics; 3. Violence, Territory and the Borders of Juridical-Political Order: Problematising the Limits of Sovereign Power; 4. The Generalised Biopolitical Border: Security as the Normal Technique of Government; 5. Alternative Border Imaginaries: The Politics of Framing; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.