Routledge Handbook of European Borderlands

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border studies theory
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citizenship and identity politics
conflicts
cross-border cooperation
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European Borderlands
European Studies
geopolitical transformations
international policy
international relations
migration studies
post-Soviet transitions
security studies
sovereignty
Soviet Union
spatial justice in European regions
transboundary governance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032295299
  • Weight: 950g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Routledge Handbook of European Borderlands revisits and reassesses the concept of borderlands in Europe, balancing case-specific perspectives with rich theoretical and conceptual avenues of research.

The significance of the transformations after the fall of the Soviet Union made European borders central to the emergence of border studies as an emerging field of study, and since then, the financial crisis, rising migration, Brexit, and the Covid-19 pandemic have continued to make European borderlands a focus of research, national and international policy, media, and everyday concern. Bringing together a wealth of cross-cutting and empirically rigorous international scholarship, the handbook investigates European borderlands as spaces of encounter and political, social, and cultural change. This book depicts borderlands as both fundamentally relational and ambiguous products of fanciful geographical imagination, as well as real and lived places in which communities engage in different forms of integration, differentiation and contestation, at many levels of political, economic, geographic, and social interaction. Drawing on a range of different disciplinary perspectives, the handbook covers key topics such as security, migration, social inequality and justice, cross-border governance, cooperation and development, environmental threats, health and disease, and conflicts over citizenship, sovereignty, and territory.

This handbook provides the perfect guide to understanding the multilayered complexities surrounding borderlands, and as such will be of interest to researchers across the fields of geography, politics, migration studies, international relations, anthropology, sociology, tourism, cultural studies, and European studies.

James W. Scott is Professor of Regional and Border Studies at the Karelian Institute, University of Eastern Finland, Finland.

Thomas M. Wilson is Professor of Anthropology at Binghamton University, State University of New York, USA.