BORDER WARS: THE CONFLICTS OF
THAT WILL DEFINE OUR FUTURE by Klaus Dodds (Ebury Press/Penguin, 2021)
I must have been seven years old when I first became aware of international borders. It was my first trip overseas, travelling by air from the UK to Portugal in the early 1980s. The idea that, having passed through immigration control, we were technically in neither one country nor the other. We were in this liminal space, a kind of limbo or no-man’s land, like something in science fiction. It seemed a little bit mind-blowing to me at the time. In later life, crossing international borders became a big part of my working life. Transporting international touring exhibitions for the British Museum – security protocols, identity checks, visa systems, customs paperwork – all these aspects which are part-and-parcel of crossing international borders became very familiar to me. But I have to confess, that early sense of fascination – first seeded when I was seven years old, probably by me asking what the words ‘duty free’ meant – has never really faded. Borders are curiously imaginary concepts made manifestly real.
Crossing the English Channel by Hovercraft |
Even at the age of seven, I’d already studied a little bit of geography at school. I remember we spent a term learning about the countries of Europe. Focussing on a different country each week, alongside what each country’s flag looked like, we learnt certain salient cultural and economic facts: For instance, in France they made cheese and wine, their most famous landmark was the Eiffel Tower, and they all wore berets! – Similarly, Holland was full of tulips and windmills, everyone wore clogs, and vast areas of the country were the result of large-scale land reclamation projects from the sea. Rudimentary stuff like that. But it was actually a trip to Holland a few years later which gave me another early life insight into international borders. We travelled from London to Amsterdam by coach, crossing the English Channel on one of those enormous Hovercrafts which are now defunct. The coach motored through France and Belgium in order to get to the Netherlands, and at each border we had to stop and surrender our passports to the Police who boarded the coach and eyed everyone suspiciously (or perhaps, having watched a lot of James Bond movies, I only imagined the suspicion?). Aside from the fact that people in these places didn’t all wear berets or clogs, I remember I was most struck by the fact that the police officers had actual guns holstered on their belts, which was quite a novel thing to see coming from England, where Police Officers (back then) were mostly unarmed. This kind of security though was nothing in comparison to that which I witnessed several decades later while on a day trip to the DMZ a few miles north of Seoul in South Korea.
August 1961 - As the Berlin Walls goes up an East German soldier defects |
In the early 1990s, two student
exchange trips to the former West and East Germanies immediately after the fall
of the Berlin Wall, opened up my mind even more to the active concept of
borders – both cultural and political, as well as intra- and international. The
fact that seemingly monolithic barriers such as the Iron Curtain could
effectively melt away after decades of being told that they were insurmountable
and eternal was equally, if not more mind-blowing once again. Several decades
on from that first overland trip to Amsterdam, and around ten years on from
those first trips to Germany, when I was making another overland journey, this
time travelling back to the UK from Germany for the British Museum in 2000, I
remembered those old borders as we now motored back through Belgium and France,
crossing those lines on the map without even a change in gear as the Autobahn gently
morphed into the Autoroute. But not all borders had vanished within the ‘New
Europe.’ Even though we never saw the sea on this occasion, we still had to halt
and show our passports before our trucks could board the train for the Channel
Tunnel. A couple more decades on and there would famously be refugee camps at
Calais, and now today boatloads of people are desperately trying to cross the
English Channel. The past forty years in Europe alone have shown that borders, far
from being static and immutable, can shift and realign much like the
refractions viewed within a rotating kaleidoscope.
Crossing the English Channel by Train |
Borders may well come and go, but
they remain a constant factor of all our lives. Be they physical (mountains, rivers,
seas) or human (national, regional, public-private), borders are conceptual
divisions which signify ownership, identity, inclusion/exclusion. On the face
of it, borders would seem to imply that we are on one or other side of them;
but in reality, it is quite possible to fall into that narrow gap between them,
and so find oneself in neither one place nor the other. Just like the thought
which first astounded me on that flight to Portugal when I was seven years old,
borders are both an idea and a reality. And there are liminal ‘no-man’s lands’
which are neither one place nor the other. We talk of crossing borders, of
negotiating borders, of transcending borders, and we often think of them as
being lines drawn on maps, but in truth, borders are more than simple territorial
demarcations – not so much stark lines, they can be blurred zones where things
meet, mingle, merge and become neither one nor the other. I first learnt about
this idea at university when I studied the anthropology of the different
societies living in highland Burma, a region now described by some academics as
‘Zomia’ – a multi-cultural zone which has long been beyond the full control of
larger lowland nation state governments.
The Berlin Wall |
Klaus Dodds recent book, Border Wars: The Conflicts That Will Define Our Future is a very timely
examination of how the issue of borders is perhaps one of the most salient to
our times. Generally speaking, all borders have a history, and that history can
often be contentious. As such, borders are invested with a dynamic dimension
which means that, as well as having a history, they have futures too, both
aspects of which remain mutable. Even seemingly long stable and peaceable
international borders can and will pose problems if they are adversely affected
by the depredations of climate change. Environmental changes can alter the
dynamics of rivers and glaciers, for example. Rivers can change course or dry
up, just as glaciers can shrink and retreat. Climate change in many places is
speeding up such changes, thus geographical boundaries are shifting or becoming
more permeable, opening new regions up to resource exploitation, as well as new
routes for commercial transportation in ways which might not have been possible
before. Consequently, geography and geopolitics are altering the ways in which
nation states view these areas, the regions in which they rub shoulders with
their neighbours. The melting polar icesheets over Canada are a case in point,
as the northwest passage is becoming increasingly open to navigation Canada is
becoming all the more anxious to assert its claim to areas which it sees as
being its territorial waters. But it is not just climate change which is
precipitating a rise in such contentions. China’s efforts at land reclamation
in the South China Sea, in which it has seized and sought to turn previously
insubstantial coral atolls into solid concrete fortified islands with harbours
and airstrips in order to bolster and consolidate its claims to the zone around
the contentious ‘nine dash line’ has ruffled the feathers of its regional
neighbours who resent what they see as strongarm tactics impinging upon their
own territorial claims and zones of exclusive economic interest.
The Sykes-Picot Agreement, 1916 |
Borders are not simply arbitrary lines
drawn on maps, relevant only to geographers and politicians. Borders affect our
individual lives, our freedoms, and the flow of goods and commodities which we
consume. As such, borders are intrinsic to all our lives whether we travel
internationally or not. The cultural and political dynamics of borders are
frequent rallying points during election campaigns. One only has to think of
the most recent examples, such as Donald Trump’s determination to build his “big,
beautiful wall” between the United States and Mexico, or the clamorous calls of
the pro-Brexit lobby in the UK and their desire to restore Britain’s
sovereignty by seceding from the European Union in 2016. Just as borders and
cultural barriers seemed to come down at the close of the twentieth century, so
the pendulum has swung full tilt in retrograde in the years since the terrorist
attacks of 11th September 2001 in the USA and especially with the recent
Covid-19 pandemic closing international borders completely during the last few
years. These events having considerably bolstered claims by some governments
for the increasing need for greater control through biometric surveillance
systems and ‘vaccine passports’, alongside more stringent and expensive visa
systems, in order to better regulate and more easily restrict the free movement
of people. Migrant crises resulting from wars in politically unstable regions
such as Afghanistan and the Middle East have had implications for neighbouring countries
and regions such as the EU, which are seen as being more stable and prosperous,
and so have become safe havens desperately sought out by refugees. The recent
invasion of the Ukraine by Russia has likewise precipitated a massive
displacement of people fleeing conflict zones, compelling them to cross borders
and forcing neighbouring states such as Poland to accommodate huge numbers of
civilians caught up in the crossfire of that particular war. Tragically, it
seems as though borders are rooted at the heart and centre of almost every item
featuring on the evening news bulletins which we watch on our TVs these days.
The Sykes-Picot Agreement, 1916 |
For many years I followed Klaus
Dodds’ 'geopolitical hotspots' column in the Geographical Magazine. It was
one of my most favourite features of the Royal Geographical Society’s monthly magazine
because the column always managed to give the relevant background, elucidating specific
events in current affairs which I might otherwise know very little or nothing
about. Often it would furnish a new angle on an issue or a region which I was
unaware of, or which I had not thought to consider before, looking at places
such as Cyprus, Kashmir, Sudan, the Falklands/Malvinas, or the Antarctic. Dodds’
column also managed to make interesting connections or comparisons which either
broadened or sharpened the focus on regional and global geopolitical matters.
As such, I was really pleased to hear of the publication of this book and
eagerly sought it out. And in reading it, I was not disappointed.
Abandoned Airliner at Nicosia Airport, Cyprus |
Dodds uses this relatively compact
tome to quite literally cover a lot of ground. He gives a comprehensive global
overview of the key themes and issues affecting borders and borderland studies
– as such, Border Wars is an excellent introduction which should appeal
to students starting out on the study of geography and geopolitics as well as lay-persons, such as me, who have an interest in such matters. Dodds
writes with a wonderfully clear and lucid style which seems to find and
maintain an effortless balance between a deeply informed academic grounding and
an open, horizon-scanning tone of commentary. Consequently, Border Wars
is an eminently accessible and highly readable book which comes with handy ‘recommended
reading’ suggestions accompanying the themes explored in each chapter (collected
at the end of the book) which will certainly help launch the engaged reader
onto deeper avenues of enquiry as seems only fitting for a book on such a
dynamic and constantly changing topic as borders. My only quibble is that the
reader’s eye is often tripped up by quite a few typos and copyediting errors,
although happily these aren’t so bad as to disrupt or confuse the actual gist or
meaning of the text itself – it’s a real shame though that so many of these
errors have made it through to the final publication which I think has one of
the most wonderful and characteristically-iconic cover designs that have long
been the hallmark of Penguin paperbacks.
Dodds’ Border Wars is a
snapshot in time. As much as it is a tool for us to look at and understand the
ever-evolving geopolitics of our changing world – right now it should serve to give
us pause to think and anticipate what directions the future might take, and how
such changes will affect us individually and collectively. But, in the future
it will be the sort of book which retains its value as a ‘history of the
present.’ Border Wars shall undoubtedly become a document which will remind
us of how we anticipated the future in the light of how such things eventually
turned out. As such, I hope it helps to guide us today by its clarity and
insight, because it speaks to an openness which borders and borderland issues
are all too often used nowadays to deny us. Borders serve to manipulate and
constrain us in ways which we might not see so readily or so clearly when we
allow the parameters around us to be drawn in uncompromisingly straight lines,
lines on maps which so often ignore the subtleties and complexities which genuinely
define the natural and cultural contours that demarcate and differentiate our
lives (especially those which were drawn all too hastily as part of the rapid
process of recent post-colonial retreats following on from the end of WW2). Depending
on whether we see borders as lines of division and separation, or borderlands
as zones in which cultures meet, merge and exchange, the ways in which we
perceive borders are the issues which ultimately define us.
The Berlin Wall, November 1991 |
As Dodds demonstrates systems of
border surveillance are becoming increasingly sophisticated and as technology
evolves and we become increasingly dependent upon it, so too we open ourselves
up to systems of greater regulation, policing and control. In effect the border
can now follow us and actively track us, and while this increased level of
state surveillance may (or may not) contribute to the safety of national
borders, it raises tricky questions concerning the right to privacy and
personal data control. All human systems are fallible, and computer networks
perhaps even moreso. Hence, the greater the sense of security then, so it
follows, the greater the vulnerability when that system fails. The theft of
such personal data and its subsequent use by third parties (be they nefarious or
otherwise) means we are in effect increasingly being required and compelled to
compromise our individuality at the behest of the larger collective. In this
sense borders are not so clear cut as we might suppose, or as we might have
been led to believe. There will always be a blurred gradation between transcending
and transgressing when it comes to the physical act of crossing borders.
Consequently, I still find the contemplation of the concept of borders just as
beguiling as I did when I was seven years old. And sadly, coming from the optimistic
generation which rejoiced at the disappearance of borders in the early 1990s, I
feel sure that the subtitle of Dodds’ book will prove to be true – the more
barriers nations seek to raise, then the more individual people will want to
tear them down. It would serve us well to think about such things now, and
genuinely ask ourselves: what kind of a future do we want to create for
ourselves and for our descendants?
Checkpoint Charlie, Berlin, October 1961 |
Klaus Dodds interviewed on France 24 - February 2022
Also on 'Waymarks'
"The Wind of Change" - Germany 1991 & 1993
Click on the images above for a link to their source
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