Soft Borders: Rethinking Sovereignty and Democracy

Author:   J. Mostov
Publisher:   Palgrave USA
ISBN:  

9781403965530


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   17 November 2008
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
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Soft Borders: Rethinking Sovereignty and Democracy


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Full Product Details

Author:   J. Mostov
Publisher:   Palgrave USA
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.437kg
ISBN:  

9781403965530


ISBN 10:   1403965536
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   17 November 2008
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufatured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Julie Mostov's book Soft Borders: Rethinking Sovereignty and Democracy encourages us to look at the key problems of the twenty first century from a novel perspective that is not only inspiring and theoretically interesting but also practically possible. This work is based on her extensive knowledge of ethnic conflicts in Southeastern Europe and the problems of citizens who find themselves trapped within the hard borders of ethnocratic states, as well as on her understanding of current trends in the West to build new fortresses against labor migration. Mostov does not offer easy solutions or call for the end of the state, but in the context of global integration, fragmentation, and new possibilities of communication she shows us a way to rethink the concepts of democracy, sovereignty, and citizenship and offers an innovative notion of multi-layered cooperation among transnational citizens in fluid and multiple soft border polities. -- Vesna Pesic, senior scientific associate of the Institute of Philosophy and Social Theory, Belgrade University, human rights and peace activist, and Member of Serbian Parliament In Soft Borders , Julie Mostov weaves a political theory of borders around their operative contingency and pervasive injustice in the world of globalization. Explaining why hard borders foster a violent, exclusionary, and repressive politics of ethnocracy by fixing and naturalizing difference and creating vulnerable others inside and outside national boundaries, she argues persuasively for a viable alternative, already in the making: soft border practices and institutions designed to secure transnational citizen rights in spaces of human mobility. --David Ludden, Professor of Political Economy and Globalization, History Department, New York University


Julie Mostov's book Soft Borders: Rethinking Sovereignty and Democracy encourages us to look at the key problems of the twenty first century from a novel perspective that is not only inspiring and theoretically interesting but also practically possible. This work is based on her extensive knowledge of ethnic conflicts in Southeastern Europe and the problems of citizens who find themselves trapped within the hard borders of ethnocratic states, as well as on her understanding of current trends in the West to build new fortresses against labor migration. Mostov does not offer easy solutions or call for the end of the state, but in the context of global integration, fragmentation, and new possibilities of communication she shows us a way to rethink the concepts of democracy, sovereignty, and citizenship and offers an innovative notion of multi-layered cooperation among transnational citizens in fluid and multiple soft border polities. -- Vesna Pesic, senior scientific associate of the Institute of Philosophy and Social Theory, Belgrade University, human rights and peace activist, and Member of Serbian Parliament<p> In Soft Borders, Julie Mostov weaves a political theory of borders around their operative contingency and pervasive injustice in the world of globalization. Explaining why hard borders foster a violent, exclusionary, and repressive politics of ethnocracy by fixing and naturalizing difference and creating vulnerable others inside and outside national boundaries, she argues persuasively for a viable alternative, already in the making: soft border practices and institutions designed to secure transnational citizen rights in spaces of human mobility. --David Ludden, Professor of Political Economy and Globalization, History Department, New York University


Julie Mostov's book Soft Borders: Rethinking Sovereignty and Democracy encourages us to look at the key problems of the twenty first century from a novel perspective that is not only inspiring and theoretically interesting but also practically possible. This work is based on her extensive knowledge of ethnic conflicts in Southeastern Europe and the problems of citizens who find themselves trapped within the hard borders of ethnocratic states, as well as on her understanding of current trends in the West to build new fortresses against labor migration. Mostov does not offer easy solutions or call for the end of the state, but in the context of global integration, fragmentation, and new possibilities of communication she shows us a way to rethink the concepts of democracy, sovereignty, and citizenship and offers an innovative notion of multi-layered cooperation among transnational citizens in fluid and multiple soft border polities. -- Vesna Pesic, senior scientific associate of the Institute of Philosophy and Social Theory, Belgrade University, human rights and peace activist, and Member of Serbian Parliament In Soft Borders, Julie Mostov weaves a political theory of borders around their operative contingency and pervasive injustice in the world of globalization. Explaining why hard borders foster a violent, exclusionary, and repressive politics of ethnocracy by fixing and naturalizing difference and creating vulnerable others inside and outside national boundaries, she argues persuasively for a viable alternative, already in the making: soft border practices and institutions designed to secure transnational citizen rights in spaces of human mobility. --David Ludden, Professor of Political Economy and Globalization, History Department, New York University


Author Information

JULIE MOSTOV is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Institute for Humanities at Drexel University, Pennsylvania, USA. She is author of Powers, Process, and Popular Sovereignty (Temple University Press, 1992).

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