ABSTRACT

The crossing of national state borders is one of the most-discussed issues of contemporary times and it poses many challenges for individual and collective identities. This concerns both short-distance mobility as well as long-distance migration. Choosing to move - or not - across international borders is a complex decision, involving both cognitive and emotional processes. This book tests the approach that three crucial thresholds need to be crossed before mobility occurs; the individual’s mindset about migrating, the choice of destination and perception of crossing borders to that location and the specific routes and spatial trajectories available to get there. Thus both borders and trajectories can act as thresholds to spatial moves. The threshold approach, with its focus on processes affecting whether, when and where to move, aims to understand the decision-making process in all its dimensions, in the hope that this will lead to a better understanding of the ways migrants conceive, perceive and undertake their transnational journeys. This book examines the three constitutive parts discerned in the cross-border mobility decision-making process: people, borders and trajectories and their interrelationships. Illustrated by a global range of case studies, it demonstrates that the relation between the three is not fixed but flexible and that decision-making contains aspects of belonging, instability, security and volatility affecting their mobility or immobility.

part |13 pages

Prologue

part I|71 pages

Mobility as an Option

chapter 2|12 pages

Shopping for Differences

Mental and Physical Borders in the German–Polish Borderlands

chapter 3|14 pages

Aspirations to Go

Understanding the Bounded Rationality of Prospective Migrants from Ghana

chapter 5|16 pages

Thresholds in Academic Mobility

The China Story

part II|95 pages

Borders and Bordering

chapter 7|16 pages

(Im)mobility in Karelia

A Space of Transforming Belonging

chapter 8|16 pages

Navigating the Thai–Cambodian Border

From Battlefield to a Dynamic Border Space 1

chapter 9|16 pages

From Spontaneity to Corridors and Gateways

Cross-Border Mobility between the United States and Canada

chapter 10|16 pages

When Fencing Is Not Protecting

The Case of Israel–Gaza

chapter 12|16 pages

Reflections on EU Border Policies

Human Mobility and Borders – Ethical Perspectives

part III|81 pages

Places of Transfer and Trajectories

chapter 13|14 pages

Doing Borderwork in Workplaces

Circular Migration from Poland to Denmark and the Netherlands

chapter 14|14 pages

Between the New World and the Old World

Changing Contexts of Exit and Reception in the Bolivia–Spain Migration Corridor

chapter 15|22 pages

Boats, Borders and Ballot Boxes

Asylum Seekers on Australia's Northern Shore

chapter 17|14 pages

Immobilized between Two EU Thresholds

Suspended Trajectories of Sub-Saharan Migrants in the Limboscape of Ceuta

part |17 pages

Epilogue