Boundaries and Borders
cracks, by which we navigate
Martin Gurri • Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium
Far more than (real or imaginary) lines on the ground, sea, air and space, we need to
acknowledge that boundaries, borders and frontiers are the results of diverse interactions
between humans. They are based on diferent rationales and hold diverse implications
for coexistence, in both cases contingent on specifc historical circumstances. They are
n... See more
acknowledge that boundaries, borders and frontiers are the results of diverse interactions
between humans. They are based on diferent rationales and hold diverse implications
for coexistence, in both cases contingent on specifc historical circumstances. They are
n... See more
https://oxford.academia.edu/ManuelFern%C3%A1ndezG%C3%B6tz • Boundaries, Borders and Frontiers: Contemporary and Past Perspectives
9. Companies, cities, currencies, communities, and countries are all becoming networks: We should start thinking of collections of people—whether communities, cities, companies, or countries—as cohesive agents unto themselves, less constrained by territoriality and with different layers aligned with one another in shifting combinations.
Parag Khanna, Balaji S. Srinivasan • Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Web3 Are Already Reshaping the World
Moving from geographical boundaries of the state to the boundaries of identity, Connolly
considers a pluralized culture’s most sensitive political crux as “the tendency by established
identities to fundamentalize what they are by demonizing or rendering needy what they
are not” (1985 194), highlighting the ambiguity of boundaries, that they bond... See more
considers a pluralized culture’s most sensitive political crux as “the tendency by established
identities to fundamentalize what they are by demonizing or rendering needy what they
are not” (1985 194), highlighting the ambiguity of boundaries, that they bond... See more
Introduction: Boundaries in Theory and History
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English,
1
a boundary is “a line which marks the limits
of an area; a dividing line” , or “a limit of something abstract, especially a subject or sphere
of activity” . The defnition for border is “a line separating two countries, administrative
divisions, or other areas” , or “the edge or boundary of something,... See more
1
a boundary is “a line which marks the limits
of an area; a dividing line” , or “a limit of something abstract, especially a subject or sphere
of activity” . The defnition for border is “a line separating two countries, administrative
divisions, or other areas” , or “the edge or boundary of something,... See more