Projects per year
Abstract
This paper explores the symbolic significance of national borders in a cross-border regional context. The main argument is that the transformation of borders is actually part of a complex and contested process of symbolisation, predicated on articulations between political projects, everyday experience, and collective memories. The Greater Geneva borderscape provides an emblematic case of cross-border cooperation that is marked by the physical erasure of the Franco-Swiss border. Rather than an absence of symbolisation, we hypothesise that the border continues to play a symbolic role through its implied ?absence? in the affirmation of a cross-border territorial project. First, we show how the invisibilisation of the border in the Greater Geneva spatial imaginaries is in fact a symbolisation strategy aimed at underlining its obsolete character. Second, we reveal how the discordances between the symbolic recoding of the border by cross-border cooperation elites and existing popular imaginations and competing meanings weakens the project. To the extent that borders are powerful symbols that are intended to stimulate emotions and a sense of belonging, the ability to mobilise their meaning-making capacity is at the heart of symbolisation politics, as much for the proponents of open borders and cross-border cooperation as for the reactionary forces that emphasise national interests and ontological insecurity.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 18-32 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers |
Volume | 45 |
Issue number | 1 |
Early online date | 11 Jun 2019 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Mar 2020 |
Keywords
- border
- borderscape
- cross-border cooperation
- Greater Geneva
- symbolisation
Projects
- 1 Finished
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EUBORDERSCAPES: Bordering, Political Landscapes ad Social Arenas: Potentials and Challenges of Evolving Border Concepts in a post-Cold War World
Sohn, C. (PI), Walther, O. (CoI) & Durand, F. (CoI)
1/06/12 → 31/05/14
Project: Research