European University Institute Library

Erosion and resilience of the Iraqi-Syrian border, Peter Harling and Alex Simon

Label
Erosion and resilience of the Iraqi-Syrian border, Peter Harling and Alex Simon
Language
eng
Abstract
Syria and Iraq's accelerating fragmentation has prompted feverish speculation about the erasure of the modern Middle East's Western-imposed borders. Such notions are not altogether divorced from reality: Syria and Iraq today are scarcely recognizable as nation-states, and their once rigid border has become increasingly porous while falling entirely from governmental control. Yet this erosion must not be mistaken for dissolution. The post-Ottoman border continues to serve an array of material and symbolic functions, and as such will remain of paramount relevance, as a resilient object of contention, for the foreseeable future. By grappling with this paradoxical state of mutation and durability and by tracing its roots back into the late twentieth century we can draw broader insights into the seismic changes roiling the Middle East, where brittle, centralizing power structures are increasingly giving way to a more grassroots and fluid political landscape with which Western actors have yet to come to terms
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Erosion and resilience of the Iraqi-Syrian border
Oclc number
945784630
Responsibility statement
Peter Harling and Alex Simon
Series statement
EUI working papers. RSC, 2015/61EUI papersBorderlands Project
Content
Mapped to

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