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      Chapter

      Trading spaces
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      Chapter

      Trading spaces

      DOI link for Trading spaces

      Trading spaces book

      Afghan borderland brokers and the transformation of the margins 1

      Trading spaces

      DOI link for Trading spaces

      Trading spaces book

      Afghan borderland brokers and the transformation of the margins 1
      ByJonathan Goodhand, Jan Koehler, Jasmine Bhatia
      BookThe Routledge Handbook of Smuggling

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      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2021
      Imprint Routledge
      Pages 16
      eBook ISBN 9781003043645
      OA Funder London School of Economics and Political Science
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      ABSTRACT

      This chapter focuses on brokers and brokerage in the context of cross border smuggling or illicit trade. Drawing on illustrative case study material from the borderscapes of eastern and western Afghanistan, we shine a light on the lives of two brokers who act as go-betweens and gatekeepers in these complex and often conflictual transnational trading networks. One is a tribal broker in Nangarhar province on the Pakistan border, and another is an illicit trader in Nimroz province on the Iranian border. By focusing on their lives we aim to achieve two things: firstly, to present new empirical evidence on brokers, so as to better understand their lives, motivations, roles and effects – and in particular, how they adapted to border hardening and closures. Specifically, we explore the positionality of brokers in terms of their personal backgrounds, their ability to straddle lifeworlds, the ‘deal spaces’ they occupy, the resources and commodities they move, and the key pathways, corridors and choke points that channel and direct trade flows. We also examine the dynamics of brokerage, including the ways that brokers find solutions or ‘fixes’ to problems but rarely resolve them, and how brokers adapt to (or fail to adapt to) moments of rupture in fluid trading environments. Finally, we reveal the effects of brokerage in terms of how brokers cumulatively shape the ways in which states and markets function in marginal frontier and borderland environments. Though their agency is circumscribed, brokers are not merely mediators; they play a role in transforming and reconfiguring connections and relationships within political and market systems.

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