ABSTRACT

This edited collection disrupts dominant narratives about space, states, and borders, bringing comparative ethnographic and geographic scholarship in conversation with one another to illuminate the varied ways in which space becomes socialized via political, economic, and cognitive appropriation. Societies must, first and foremost, do more than wrangle over ownership and land rights — they must dwell in space. Yet, historically the interactions between the state’s territorial imperative with previous forms of landscape management have unfolded in a variety of ways, including top-down imposition, resistance, and negotiation between local and external actors. These interactions have resulted in hybrid forms of territoriality, and are often fraught with fundamentally different perceptions of landscape. This book foregrounds these experiences and draws attention to situations in which different social constructions of space and territory coincide, collide, or overlap. Each ethnographic case in this volume presents forms of territoriality that are contingent upon contested histories, politics, landscape, the presence or absence of local heterogeneity and the involvement of multiple external actors with differing motivations — ultimately all resulting in the potential for conflict or collaboration and divergent implications for conceptions of community, autochthony and identity.

chapter 1|17 pages

Negotiating Territoriality

Spatial Dialogues between State and Tradition

part I|77 pages

Europe

chapter 2|15 pages

Between Communal Herding and State Parcellation

The Conflicting Territorialities of the Spanish Pyrenees

chapter 3|15 pages

Highland Sanctuary and the State

Mountains as a Political Category in Mediterranean History

chapter 4|14 pages

The Invention of Terroirs, a Social Image for French Luxury Goods

Imagining Burgundy and Its Wines in the Interwar Years

chapter 5|14 pages

'None of Us Could Have Been Against Consolidation in Principle'

A Short History of Market and Policy Failure in Central Eastern Europe

chapter 6|17 pages

Developing Discursive Ground

Exploring Activism and Territoriality in Slovakia's Environmental Movement from Communism to Cyberspace

part II|63 pages

Settler and Mestizo Societies

chapter 7|15 pages

Contested Border Crossings

Territorialities in the Brazilian and Peruvian Amazon

chapter 8|15 pages

Reterritorialization and Rule in the United States

Insights from Conflict over the Management of Public Land

chapter 10|18 pages

Territory to State

Law, Power and Water in New Mexico

part III|88 pages

Postcolonial Societies

chapter 11|17 pages

Ancestors Shape the Land

Chieftaincy and Territoriality in Northern Ghana

chapter 12|17 pages

Debating Belonging on Contested Land

Cultural Politics and Territoriality in Rural Kenya

chapter 13|19 pages

Negotiating Territoriality in Eritrean Refugee Resettlement

Agrarian History, Mobile Livelihoods and State Making

chapter 14|14 pages

Insularity and Interconnection

Competing Territorial Imaginaries in the Marshall Islands

chapter 15|19 pages

On the Threshold of Urban Hong Kong

Liminal Territoriality in New Kowloon