
Patterns in Border Security
Regional Comparisons
- 196 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Patterns in Border Security
Regional Comparisons
About this book
How do security communities transform into security regimes? This book compares the construction of cross-border security regimes across five regions of the world to illustrate how trust emerges from the day-to-day relations of coordination, cooperation, or collaboration. Patterns in Border Security: Regional Comparisons studies the way borderland communities develop, implement, and align border policy to enhance their sense of security. Borders have been evolving rapidly in direct response to the multifaceted challenges brought on by globalization, which has had a nuanced impact on the way borders are governed and border security is managed. Taking a methodical comparative regional approach, this book identifies and contrasts determinants of nascent, ascendant, and mature border security regimes, which the book documents in seven regional case studies from across the globe. The findings identify conditions that give rise to cross-border and trans-governmental coordination, cooperation, or collaboration. Specifically, pluralistic forms of communication and interactions, sometimes far from the actual borderline, emerge as key determinants of friendly and trustful relations among both contiguous and non-contiguous regions. This is a significant innovation in the study of borders, in particular in the way borders mediate security. For six decades international security studies had posited culture as the bedrock of security communities. By contrast, the book identifies conditions, a method, and a model for adequate and effective cross-border relations, but whose outcome is not contingent on culture. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics with a Foreword by the Secretary General of the World Customs Organization.
The Open Access chapters of this book, available at http://www.tandfebooks.com/doi/view/10.4324/9781003216926, have been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Citation Information
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword
- IntroductionāPatterns in nascent, ascendant and mature border security: regional comparisons in transgovernmental coordination, cooperation, and collaboration
- 1 The United StatesāCanada security community: a case study in mature border management
- 2 Security beyond the border: exploring Australia and New Zealand trans-Tasman relations in a globalised world
- 3 The European Unionās model of Integrated Border Management: preventing transnational threats, cross-border crime and irregular migration in the context of the EUās security policies and strategies
- 4 Between triple borders: border security across Latin Americaās Southern Cone
- 5 Border security management in the MENA region: models of nascent and ascendant coordination and cooperation
- 6 Border security in Africa: the paradigmatic case of the Sahel as the embodiment of security and economy in borderlands
- 7 So similar yet so distant: border security management between India and Pakistan as a laboratory of non-experimentation
- Index