Border: Difference between revisions
m rv - but changing to "maritime border" would be contrary to the cited sources, like the U.S. Dept of State one, and normal international law terminology - see talk |
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Throughout history, technological advances have reduced the costs of transport and communication across these natural borders. This has reduced the significance of natural borders over time. As a result, political borders that have been formalized more recently — such as those in Africa or Americas — typically conform less to natural borders than very old borders — such as those in Europe or Asia — do. States whose borders conform to natural borders are, for similar reasons, more likely to be strong nation-states. |
Throughout history, technological advances have reduced the costs of transport and communication across these natural borders. This has reduced the significance of natural borders over time. As a result, political borders that have been formalized more recently — such as those in Africa or Americas — typically conform less to natural borders than very old borders — such as those in Europe or Asia — do. States whose borders conform to natural borders are, for similar reasons, more likely to be strong nation-states. |
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==Maritime |
==Maritime borders== |
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{{Main|Maritime boundary}} |
{{Main|Maritime boundary}} |
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A maritime |
A maritime border is a division enclosing an area in the ocean where a nation has exclusive rights over the mineral and biological resources,<ref name="vliz_info">VLIZ Maritime Boundaries Geodatabase, [http://www.vliz.be/vmdcdata/marbound/info.php General info]; retrieved 19 Nov 2010</ref> encompassing maritime features, limits and zones.<ref name="geoscience">Geoscience Australia, [http://www.ga.gov.au/marine/jurisdiction/definitions.jsp Maritime definitions]; retrieved 19 Nov 2010</ref> Maritime borders represent the jurisdictional borders of a [[maritime nation]]<ref>United States Department of State, [http://www.state.gov/g/oes/ocns/opa/convention/c28187.htm Maritime boundaries]; retrieved 19 Nov 2010.</ref> and are recognized by the [[United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea]]. |
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Maritime |
Maritime borders exist in the context of [[territorial waters]], [[contiguous zone]]s, and [[exclusive economic zone]]s; however, the terminology does not encompass [[lake]] or [[river]] boundaries, which are considered within the context of land boundaries. |
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Some maritime |
Some maritime borders have remained indeterminate despite efforts to clarify them. This is explained by an array of factors, some of which illustrate regional problems.<ref>Valencia, Mark J. (2001). {{Google books|ZhXN8ILQCnIC|''Maritime Regime Building: Lessons Learned and Their Relevance for Northeast Asia,'' pp. 149-166.|page=149}}</ref> |
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==Border economics== |
==Border economics== |
Revision as of 22:46, 15 January 2011
It has been suggested that Maritime boundary be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since November 2010. |
Borders define geographic boundaries of political entities or legal jurisdictions, such as governments, sovereign states, federated states and other subnational entities. Some borders—such as a state's internal administrative borders, or inter-state borders within the Schengen Area—are open and completely unguarded. Other borders are partially or fully controlled, and may be crossed legally only at designated border checkpoints. Some, mostly contentious, borders may even foster the setting up of buffer zones.
Definitions
In the past, many borders were not clearly defined lines, but were neutral zones called marchlands. This has been reflected in recent times with the neutral zones that were set up along part of Saudi Arabia's borders with Kuwait and Iraq (however, these zones no longer exist). In modern times the concept of a marchland has been replaced by that of the clearly defined and demarcated border. For the purposes of border control, airports and seaports are also classed as borders. Most countries have some form of border control to restrict or limit the movement of people, animals, plants, and goods into or out of the country. Under international law, each country is generally permitted to define the conditions that have to be met by a person to legally cross its borders by its own laws, and to prevent persons from crossing its border when this happens in violation of those laws.
Some legal orders require presentation of passports and visas, or other identity documents to cross borders. To stay or work within a country's borders aliens (foreign persons) may need special immigration documents or permits that authorise them to do so. Having such documents (i.e., visa and passport) however does not automatically guarantee that the alien will be allowed to cross to the other side of the border.
Moving goods across a border often requires the payment of excise tax, often collected by customs officials. Animals (and occasionally humans) moving across borders may need to go into quarantine to prevent the spread of exotic or infectious diseases. Most countries prohibit carrying illegal drugs or endangered animals across their borders. Moving goods, animals or people illegally across a border, without declaring them, seeking permission, or deliberately evading official inspection constitutes smuggling.
In regions where smuggling, migration, and infiltration are a problem, many countries fortify borders with separation barriers and institute formal border control procedures. Some borders are only signposted. This is common in countries within the European Schengen Area and on rural sections of the Canada – United States border. Borders may even be completely unmarked, a common occurrence with remote or forested borders.
Hostile countries that are not at war may be separated by a militarized border. The most well-known of these is the former Berlin Wall. Furthermore, many hostile, militarized borders are separated by a buffer zone or demilitarized zone, such as the Korean Demilitarized Zone and the United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus, and may be separated by a buffer state. The most extreme borders are completely closed with no passage, such as the Blue Line that separates Israel and Lebanon.
Natural borders
Natural borders are geographical features that present natural obstacles to communication and transport. Existing political borders are often a formalization of these historical, natural obstacles.
Some geographical features that often constitute natural borders are:
- Oceans: oceans create very costly natural borders. Very few nation states span more than one continent. Only very large and resource-rich states are able to sustain the costs of governance across oceans for longer periods of time.
- Rivers: some political borders have been formalized along natural borders formed by rivers. Some examples are; the Rio Grande border (Mexico-USA), the Rhine border (France-Germany), and the Mekong border (Thailand-Laos)
- Lakes: larger lakes create natural borders. One example is the natural border created by Lake Tanganyika (Congo-Burundi-Tanzania-Zambia)
- Forests: denser jungles or forests can create strong natural borders. One example of a natural forest border is the Amazon rain forest (Colombia-Venezuela-Guyana-Brazil-Bolivia-Peru)
- Mountain ranges: research on borders suggests that mountains have especially strong effects as natural borders. Many nations in Europe and Asia have had their political borders defined along mountain ranges.
Throughout history, technological advances have reduced the costs of transport and communication across these natural borders. This has reduced the significance of natural borders over time. As a result, political borders that have been formalized more recently — such as those in Africa or Americas — typically conform less to natural borders than very old borders — such as those in Europe or Asia — do. States whose borders conform to natural borders are, for similar reasons, more likely to be strong nation-states.
Maritime borders
A maritime border is a division enclosing an area in the ocean where a nation has exclusive rights over the mineral and biological resources,[1] encompassing maritime features, limits and zones.[2] Maritime borders represent the jurisdictional borders of a maritime nation[3] and are recognized by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Maritime borders exist in the context of territorial waters, contiguous zones, and exclusive economic zones; however, the terminology does not encompass lake or river boundaries, which are considered within the context of land boundaries.
Some maritime borders have remained indeterminate despite efforts to clarify them. This is explained by an array of factors, some of which illustrate regional problems.[4]
Border economics
The presence of borders often fosters certain economic features or anomalies. Wherever two jurisdictions come into contact, special economic opportunities arise for border trade. Smuggling provides a classic case; contrariwise, a border region may flourish on the provision of excise or of import–export services — legal or quasi-legal, corrupt or corruption-free. Different regulations on either side of a border may encourage services to position themselves at or near that border: thus the provision of pornography, of prostitution, of alcohol and/or of narcotics may cluster around borders, city limits, county lines, ports and airports. In a more planned and official context, Special Economic Zones (SEZs) often tend to cluster near borders or ports.
Even if the goods are not perceived to be undesirable, states will still seek to document and regulate the cross-border trade in order to collect tariffs and benefit from foreign currency exchange revenues.[5] Thus, there is the concept unofficial trade in goods otherwise legal; for example, the cross-border trade in livestock by pastoralists in the Horn of Africa. Ethiopia sells an estimated $250 to $300 million of livestock to Somalia, Kenya and Djibouti every year unofficially, over 100 times the official estimate.[5]
Human economic traffic across borders (apart from kidnapping), may involve mass commuting between workplaces and residential settlements. The removal of internal barriers to commerce, as in France after the French Revolution or in Europe since the 1940s, de-emphasises border-based economic activity and fosters free trade. Euroregions are similar official structures built around commuting across borders.
Politics
Political borders have a variety of meanings for those whom they affect. Many borders in the world have checkpoints where border control agents inspect those crossing the boundary.
In much of Europe, such controls were abolished by the Schengen Agreement and subsequent European Union legislation. Since the Treaty of Amsterdam, the competence to pass laws on crossing internal and external boders within the European Union and the associated Schengen States (Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein) lies exclusively within the jurisdiction of the European Union, except where states have used a specific right to opt-out (United Kingdom and Ireland, which maintain a common travel area amongst themselves). For details, see Schengen Area.
The United States has notably increased measures taken in border control on the Canada–United States border and the United States–Mexico border during its War on Terrorism (See Shantz 2010). One American writer has said that the 3,600 km (2,000 mile) US-Mexico border is probably "the world's longest boundary between a First World and Third World country."[6]
Historic borders such as the Great Wall of China, the Maginot Line, and Hadrian's Wall have played a great many roles and been marked in different ways. While the stone walls, the Great Wall of China and the Roman Hadrian's Wall in Britain had military functions, the entirety of the Roman borders were very porous, which encouraged Roman economic activity with neighbors.[7] On the other hand, a border like the Maginot Line was entirely military and was meant to prevent any access in what was to be World War II to France by its neighbor, Germany. Germany ended up going around the Maginot Line through Belgium just as it had done in World War I.
Cross-border regions
Macro-regional integration initiatives, such as the European Union and NAFTA, have spurred the establishment of cross-border regions. These are initiatives driven by local or regional authorities, aimed at dealing with local border-transcending problems such as transport and environmental degradation.[8] Many cross-border regions are also active in encouraging intercultural communication and dialogue as well as cross-border economic development strategies.
In Europe, the European Union provides financial support to cross-border regions via its Interreg programme. The Council of Europe has issued the Outline Convention on Transfrontier Co-operation, providing a legal framework for cross-border co-operation even though it is in practice rarely used by Euroregions.
Border studies
There has been a renaissance in the study of borders during the past two decades, partially from creation of a counter narrative to notions of a borderless world that have been advanced as part of globalization theory.[9] Examples of recent initiatives are the Border Regions in Transition network of scholars,[10] the International Boundaries Research Unit at the University of Durham,[11] the Association of Borderlands Studies based in North America,[12] and the founding of smaller border research centres at Nijmegen[13] and Queen's University Belfast.[14]
Contemporary leading scholars in the field of border studies include Emmanuel Brunet Jailly at the University of Victoria, who is the Executive Secretary and Treasurer of the Association for Borderlands Studies, (Emmanuel Brunet Jailly, and Henk van Houtum and Martin van der Velde at Radboud University are the editors of the international scholarly Journal of Borderlands Studies), David Newman at Ben Gurion University (co-editor of the international journal Geopolitics). Other leading scholars include Liam O'Dowd at Queen's University Belfast, Anssi Paasi at the University of Oulu, Anthony Payan at the University of Texas El Paso (Payan is the past President of the Association for Borderland Studies), James Scott at Karelian Institute, Joensuu University, Akihiro Iwashita at Hokkaido University, and Doris Wastl-Walter at the University of Bern.
Image gallery
The following pictures show in how many different ways international and regional borders can be closed off, monitored, at least marked as such, or simply unremarkable.
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Border at Tijuana, Mexico and San Ysidro, California, USA. A straight-line border surveyed when the region was thinly populated.
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A militarized frontier: the Berlin Wall used to be one of the most famous guarded borders in the world.
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A sign welcoming visitors to the U.S. state of Georgia.
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A warning marker at the Canada – United States border at Point Roberts, Washington.
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The Peace Arch at the Canada – United States border, the longest common border in the world.
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A sign at the Polish-Czech border near the Králický Sněžník, indicating that the crossing of the border is permitted to only citizens of the European Union and of five more states. When the Schengen rules became applicable there in 2007, the sign became obsolete.
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Several markers designating the border between Nicholas and Greenbrier counties in West Virginia, USA along a secondary road. Notice the older stone survey markers a few meters behind the modern highway sign.
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A border within a closely built-up area – here near Aachen between Germany and the Netherlands: Germany starts at the red line drawn in the photo.
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Border between the Netherlands and Belgium next to a street café. Some European borders originate from former aristocratic land ownership limits.
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This recently-built building of the Eurode Business Centre straddles the border between the Netherlands and Germany, in Kerkrade and Herzogenrath.
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Italy/Switzerland border stone at Passo San Giacomo. Some borders were broadly defined by treaty, and surveyors would then choose a suitable line on the ground.
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A sign along with a stone marking the border between Lexington, Massachusetts and Burlington, Massachusetts on a local road.
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Guadiana International Bridge in the Spain - Portugal border, created by the Treaty of Zamora in 1143. Is one of the oldest borders in the world.
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The gate that borders East Nusa Tenggara in Indonesia and Timor Leste.
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The marker between the USA and Canada in Waterton-Glacier National Park.
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A sign showing the limitations of the Frontier Closed Area, a 28-km² area along the Hong Kong-side of the 30-km-long Hong Kong–China border
See also
- Border control
- Geopolitics
- List of countries and territories by land and maritime borders
- List of countries that border only one other country
- List of international border rivers
- List of land borders by date of establishment
- List of land border lengths
- List of national border changes since World War I
- List of sets of four countries that border one another
- Political geography
- Political science
References
- ^ VLIZ Maritime Boundaries Geodatabase, General info; retrieved 19 Nov 2010
- ^ Geoscience Australia, Maritime definitions; retrieved 19 Nov 2010
- ^ United States Department of State, Maritime boundaries; retrieved 19 Nov 2010.
- ^ Valencia, Mark J. (2001). Maritime Regime Building: Lessons Learned and Their Relevance for Northeast Asia, pp. 149-166., p. 149, at Google Books
- ^ a b Pavanello, Sara 2010. Working across borders - Harnessing the potential of cross-border activities to improve livelihood security in the Horn of Africa drylands. London: Overseas Development Institute
- ^ Murphy, Cullen. Roman Empire: gold standard of immigration. Los Angeles Times, June 16, 2007 (accessed here June 20, 2007)
- ^ Murphy 2007
- ^ Perkmann, M, Building governance institutions across European borders, Regional Studies, 1999, Vol: 33, Pages: 657 - 667 [1]
- ^ D. Newman & A. Paasi, `Fences and neighbours in the post-modern world: boundary narratives in political geography', Progress in Human Geography, 22 (2), 186-207, 1998; D. Newman, `The lines that continue to separate us: Borders in our borderless world’, Progress in Human Geography, Vol 30 (2), 1-19, 2006.
- ^ Border Regions in Transition IX Conference, North American and European Border Regions in Comparative Perspective: Markets, States and Border Communities, (January 12-15, 2008) Victoria, BC Canada and Bellingham, WA United States.
- ^ International Boundaries Research Unit, University of Durham.
- ^ Association for Borderland Studies.
- ^ Nijmegen Centre for Border Research.
- ^ Centre for International Borders Research (CIBR) Queen's University Belfast
External links
- Border Stories - A website devoted to stories from both sides of the U.S. Mexico Border
- Collection of pictures of European borders, mainly intra-Schengen borders
- Institut Européen des Itinéraires Culturels homepage
- Border Ireland - database of activities and publications on cross-border co-operation on the island of Ireland since 1980's
- Talking Borders Queen's University Belfast online audio archive
- Shantz, Jeff. 2010. Racial Profiling and Borders: International, Interdisciplinary Perspectives Lake Mary: Vandeplas