The social ecology of border landscapes
The social ecology of border landscapes
The aim of this book is to show how social and ecological structures can soften borders and barriers and create resilient spaces and communities.
The aim of the book is to show what means exist to soften borders and avoid the discrimination and marginalisation that separation can generate. To extend the debate, the book draws on the theoretical framework of social ecology. Social ecology is concerned with the complex relations between nature and society and seeks to provide perspectives by showing how environmental issues are dependent on the social context.
The book is divided into four parts each with a different spatial and conceptual approach: the frames, bridges, corridors and portals. In each part, it is shown how borders, tangible or intangible, are not only the result of politics and power, but that they also represent human and non-human interactions.
Part I is devoted to a theoretical presentation of the framework of border environments.
Part II examines contemporary territorial limits (from geographical borders to social boundaries) and presents a number of projects with sociological-ecological practices involving resilience, restoration and reclamation, which build bridges between territories.
Part III examines projects in the interstitial space between borders. It explores the biodiversity of no man's lands and social exchanges in this type of territory such a refugee camps.
Part IV describes militancy and reterritorialisation processes in decolonisation processes.
The tables of contents is as follows:
Introduction social ecologies and borderlands
Part I. Frames: mapping social ecologies in border territories
- Chapter one on the agency of borderlands, Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly
- Chapter two social ecology and transboundary conservation: (re)connecting nature and people in borderlands, Kevan Zunckel
- Chapter three social ecologies and structural violence: boundary-making as nature-making in a gated globe, Hilary Cunningham and Stephen Bede Scharper
Part II. Bridges : resilience, restoration and reclamation
- Chapter four borders as zones of experiential learning: the case of the balkans peace park project, Todd Walters and Saleem H. Ali
- Chapter five social ecologies in borderlands: crane habitat restoration and sustainable agriculture project in the democratic people’s republic of korea, Hall Healy, George Archibald and Arthur H. Westing
- Chapter six socio-ecological transformations in riparian zones: the production of spaces of exclusion and the uneven development of resilience in the sonoran borderlands, Lily A. House-Peters
- Chapter seven from no-man’s land to every-man’s land: socio-ecological approaches to reclaiming shared spaces in border landscapes, with examples from germany and Cyprus, Anna Grichting
Part III. Corridors:: catalysts and collaboration in confined spaces
- Chapter eight ensuring hope in militarized landscapes: the case of Lebanon, Rabih Shibli
- Chapter nine domesticating and enlarging one’s territory: day-to-day politics in a confined space—the shu’fat refugee camp in east Jerusalem, Sylvaine Bulle
- Chapter ten urban alternatives and collaborative economics in belfast’s contested space, Brendan Murtagh
Part IV. Portals:: dialogue, exception and reterritorialization
- Chapter eleven australia day: a social ecology dialogue across aboriginal and white cultures, Carol Birrell and Stuart B. Hill
- Chapter twelve re-legislating the soil: enclosures and exception at the amazon frontiers, Paulo Tavares
- Chapter thirteen mediterranean edges: reterritorializing natural and social ecologies, Verena Andermatt Conley
Conclusion making sense of social ecology, borders and the environment, Michele Zebich-Knos
Borders are also lines that separate people, places, things and even minds. It is at this intersection that hybrid cultures can develop. Through the case studies it contains, the book shows that the inhabitants of these political border regions are looking for a balance and a sense of community.
Finally the last chapter draws two major conclusions:
- to produce relevant policies and manage borders, integrating local needs and behaviours is essential
- border environments should be considered as being part of a large global community and not as isolated ecosystems.
Anna Grichting, Assistant Professor, Qatar University
Michele Zebich-Knos, Professor Emeritus of Political Science and International Affairs, Kennesaw State University/University System of Georgia (Atlanta, USA)
Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly
Kevan Zunckel
Hilary Cunningham
Stephen Bede Scharper
Todd Walters
Saleem H. Ali
Hall Healy
George Archibald
Arthur H. Westing
Lily A. House-Peters
Anna Grichting
Rabih Shibli
Sylvaine Bulle
Brendan Murtagh
Carol Birrell
Stuart B. Hill
Paulo Tavares
Verena Andermatt Conley
Michele Zebich-Knos
1783086696
9781783086696