On Borders
English

About The Book

When are borders justified? Who has a right to control them? Where should they be drawn?Today people think of borders as an island''s shores. Just as beaches delimit a castaway''s realm so borders define the edges of a territory occupied by a unified people to whom the land legitimately belongs. Hence a territory is legitimate only if it belongs to a people unified by a civic identity. Sadly this Desert Island Model of territorial politics forces us to choose. If we want territories then we can either have democratic legitimacy or inclusion of different civic identities--but not both. The resulting politics creates mass xenophobia migrant-bashing hoarding of natural resources and border walls. To escape all this On Borders presents an alternative model. Drawing on an intellectual tradition concerned with how land and climate shape institutions it argues that we should not see territories as pieces of property owned by identity groups. Instead we should see them as watersheds: as interconnected systems where institutions people the biota and the land together create overlapping civic duties and relations what the book calls place-specific duties. This Watershed Model argues that borders are justified when they allow us to fulfill those duties; that border-control rights spring from internationally-agreed conventions--not from internal legitimacy; that borders should be governed cooperatively by the neighboring states and the states system; and that border redrawing should be done with environmental conservation in mind. The book explores how this model undoes the exclusionary politics of desert islands.
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