2022
DOI: 10.1093/ia/iiab206
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Between mobile corridors and immobilizing borders: race, fixity and friction in Palestine/Israel

Abstract: This article wrestles with the question of ‘national’ borders in racial capitalism. We do so through an examination of border and capitalist corridors. We focus particularly on the Israeli border, branded and then sold to the rest of the world by the epistemic community of border-makers and interlocutors. In tracking the Israeli border and showing the implication of the experts and their markets, we ask how the border reflects and is refracted through a global order organized by the twin dictates of racism and… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…These ‘small sections’ are those that pass close to the West Bank and this narrative reinforces settler‐colonial imaginations of Palestine as ‘other’ and a security threat. This echoes Manchanda and Plonski's writing on the Palestine–Israel border as creating narratives about space that are not just material but imaginary: ‘The border takes hold in the imperial imagination, becoming a metonym for safety and stability’ (2022, p. 197).…”
Section: Case Study: Walking Trails In the Middle East And North Africamentioning
confidence: 83%
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“…These ‘small sections’ are those that pass close to the West Bank and this narrative reinforces settler‐colonial imaginations of Palestine as ‘other’ and a security threat. This echoes Manchanda and Plonski's writing on the Palestine–Israel border as creating narratives about space that are not just material but imaginary: ‘The border takes hold in the imperial imagination, becoming a metonym for safety and stability’ (2022, p. 197).…”
Section: Case Study: Walking Trails In the Middle East And North Africamentioning
confidence: 83%
“…A rich literature draws our attention to the mobilities and temporalities of colonialism (Carby, 2019; Cowen, 2020; Khalili, 2020; Lowe, 2015; Sheller, 2018). This literature is complemented by increasingly nuanced work on infrastructure in geography and related disciplines (Arefin, 2019; Brady, 2021; Curley, 2021; Gergan & McCreary, 2022; Hope, 2022; Manchanda & Plonski, 2022; Millington, 2018; Simone, 2004, 2021; Solomon, 2021). A focus on walking trails as infrastructure provides a means to bring together literatures on infrastructures, colonialism, and mobilities in nuanced ways.…”
Section: Walking Trails As Infrastructurementioning
confidence: 99%
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