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Worldmaking and Border Politics - by Anne McNevin - 1 of 1

$110.99

FormatHardcover

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Highlights

  • The need and desire for people to move from one place to another, including and especially from one state to another, generates responses from fear and hostility to welcome and compassion.
  • About the Author: Anne McNevin is a non-resident research fellow at the Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility at The New School.
  • 248 Pages
  • Political Science, International Relations

Description



About the Book



"The need and desire for people to move from one place to another, including and especially from one state to another, generates responses from fear and hostility to welcome and compassion. At one extreme, closing borders is the most compelling option for many who wish to repel movements they do not endorse. Others struggle for open borders, but their demands are widely considered politically unfeasible. Between these two poles, the majority of public and scholarly debate pits the human rights of the migrant against the sovereign rights of the state. The sense that there is no escape from the tensions between contending rights gives rise to both enthusiastic and reluctant support for border controls, as either the best or the least-worst options available to deal with the existential stakes of human mobility. Anne McNevin shows why this impasse need not define the limits of political possibility. This book offers a vision of a different border politics, drawing on diverse examples, from a site of immigration detention in Papua New Guinea, to Australian Indigenous modalities of sovereignty to contemporary abolitionist movements. Highlighting inventive practices that prefigure a different kind of world, McNevin makes the case for imagination and experimentation as crucial practical components of geopolitical transformation"-- Provided by publisher.



Book Synopsis



The need and desire for people to move from one place to another, including and especially from one state to another, generates responses from fear and hostility to welcome and compassion. At one extreme, closing borders is the most compelling option for many who wish to repel movements they do not endorse. Others struggle for open borders, but their demands are widely considered politically unfeasible. Between these two poles, the majority of public and scholarly debate pits the human rights of the migrant against the sovereign rights of the state. The sense that there is no escape from the tensions between contending rights gives rise to both enthusiastic and reluctant support for border controls, as either the best or the least-worst options available to deal with the existential stakes of human mobility.

Anne McNevin shows why this impasse need not define the limits of political possibility. This book offers a vision of a different border politics, drawing on diverse examples, from a site of immigration detention in Papua New Guinea, to Australian Indigenous modalities of sovereignty to contemporary abolitionist movements. Highlighting inventive practices that prefigure a different kind of world, McNevin makes the case for imagination and experimentation as crucial practical components of geopolitical transformation.



Review Quotes




"Worldmaking and Border Politics is a nuanced, generative assault on the dehumanization which characterizes our times. Amidst acute threats to those who cross borders, Anne McNevin offers imagination and opportunity. Not only is she an erudite guide to scholarship and current affairs, she lights a path to alternative framings, hope, and political possibilities."--Loren Landau, University of Oxford

"In a time of hardening borders and narrowing futures, Anne McNevin's book compellingly reopens the potentiality of alternative ways of imagining polities not through utopian projects but via case studies of actual achievements. It is an inspiring inquiry into becoming and an invitation to think that another world is possible." --Didier Fassin, co-author of Exile: Chronicle of the Border

"This is a much-needed and brilliant book, that invites us to move beyond no border/open border/closed border oppositions and situate a critical analysis of the politics of migration containment on the terrain of world-making practices. The challenge, McNevin compellingly argues, consists in engaging in a transformative critique of the border regime and envisioning a radically different border politics."--Martina Tazzioli, University of Bologna

"Through her powerful analysis of moments of resistance against border violence, McNevin shows us that borders are not hard divides but rather ropes of the ugly knotted practices we use to cordon off alien from citizen, and then she shows us, very precisely, how to pull at their threads and weave new futures of enduring interconnection and freedom. In this exquisite book, she gives us the border politics of hope." --Natasha Iskander, New York University



About the Author



Anne McNevin is a non-resident research fellow at the Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility at The New School.
Dimensions (Overall): 9.0 Inches (H) x 6.0 Inches (W)
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 248
Genre: Political Science
Sub-Genre: International Relations
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Theme: General
Format: Hardcover
Author: Anne McNevin
Language: English
Street Date: June 9, 2026
TCIN: 1005499620
UPC: 9781503645400
Item Number (DPCI): 247-37-7675
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Estimated ship dimensions: 1 inches length x 6 inches width x 9 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 1 pounds
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