在流动和安全的连续体中重新进入人类:来自两个象征性边界的感知

IF 0.2 Q4 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Anitta Kynsilehto, Angel Iglesias Ortiz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文认为,在探索国际关系学术中的流动性时,有必要将国家中心和(重新)以人为中心。为了提出这一论点,我们将女权主义和批判性安全研究以及多学科的见解结合在一起,以解决流动人员与国家主权执行之间的相遇。这使我们能够突出在这次相遇中交织在一起的安全与流动的连续性。在这样做的过程中,我们挑战了该学科对安全的理解,这种理解通常只从国家安全的角度概念化,尽管对这种理解的批评来自并建立在不同的批评方法之上。此外,女权主义国际关系学术研究和女权主义安全研究特别强调有必要将安全和暴力作为跨越从肉体和亲密到全球和跨国的各种场所的连续体进行研究,并跨越时间。结合流动性研究,这些研究侧重于跨越国家、地区和大陆的移民轨迹,其间有选择或不希望的不流动时期,这一学术体系有助于我们理解边境执法如何影响不同位置的人的生活。这种做法也有助于让人们看到仅基于国家利益的政策制定的有意和无意后果,以及拒绝承认陷入这些后果的人。在方法上,本文借鉴了在墨西哥-美国边境的墨西哥一侧和摩洛哥进行的长期民族志研究。我们汇集了各自研究项目的见解,以解决边界外部化及其在世界两个不同地区的影响,由两个不同的国家(美国)和超国家实体(欧盟)对其南部邻国颁布,可能在经济和政治上不那么强大,但据称类似的主权国家。本文的组织如下:我们从第一部分开始讨论在边界制定的国家主权的关键概念,并展示某些国家的边界如何远远超出其划定的领土。这一过程被概念化为移民管理和边境控制的外部化,可以被视为与受这些外部化做法影响的国家的主权相矛盾。然后我们继续讨论安全的概念,并提出谁的安全受到威胁的问题。在这里,我们展示了国家安全的执行是如何危及那些在全球流动阶层中处于较低特权地位的流动人员的安全和保障的。在第二部分中,我们将讨论前一节中概述的观点如何在我们的两个研究地点中体现出来。本节着重于流动性和不流动性的连续体以及安全性和不安全性的连续体,并提出我们如何开始将不同定位的人类作为一个多元但完整的主体来处理。我们认为,国际关系学术通常完全忽视人,或者至多承认高层次政治中的人,这是基于理性行为者理论的模型。此外,对我们在研究地点获得的见解的分析揭示了流动性不均匀分布的方式,以及流动性的制定如何以复杂的方式被性别和种族化。我们通过反思这些问题在人类流动和安全的背景下对国际关系学术的意义以及对流动正义的贡献来结束本文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Recentering the human in the continuums of in/mobility and in/security: Perceptions from two emblematic borders
This paper argues for a need to decenter the state and (re)center the human when exploring mobilities within international relations scholarship. To make this argument we bring together feminist and critical security studies, as well as multidisciplinary insights, to address the encounter between the person on the move and the enforcement of national sovereignty. This allows us to highlight the continuums of in/security and im/mobility entwined in this encounter. In so doing, we challenge the discipline’s understanding of security that is often conceptualized from the perspective of state security only, despite critiques of such understandings that emanate from and build on different critical approaches. Furthermore, feminist international relations scholarship and feminist security studies in particular have stressed the necessity to examine security and violence as continuums that traverse across sites ranging from the corporeal and intimate to the global and transnational, and which span over time. Combined with mobility studies that focus on migrant trajectories across countries, regions, and continents with periods of chosen or unwanted immobility in between, this body of scholarship helps us understand how border enforcement impacts diversely positioned persons’ lives. Such an exercise is also useful for making visible the intended and unintended consequences of policymaking that is based on state interests only, and one that refuses to acknowledge the human beings who are caught up in these consequences. Methodologically, the paper draws on long-term ethnographic research conducted at the Mexican side of the Mexico-US border and in Morocco. We have brought together insights from our respective research projects to address border externalization and its impact in two different parts of the world, enacted by two different states (the US) and supranational entities (the EU) on their neighbors to the South, likely to be economically and politically less powerful but supposedly similarly sovereign states. The paper is organized as follows: we begin the first section by discussing the key notion of state sovereignty which is enacted at the border and demonstrate how borders of certain states extend far beyond their demarcated territories. This process, conceptualized as externalization of migration management and border control, can be perceived as contradicting the sovereignty of those states subjected to these externalization practices. We then move on to the notion of security and ask the question of whose security is at stake. Here we demonstrate how the enforcement of state security jeopardizes the safety and security of those people on the move who are located in less privileged positions in the global hierarchies of mobility. In the second section, we discuss how the perspectives outlined in the previous section manifest in our two research sites. This section focuses on the continuums of mobility and immobility and those of security and insecurity, and proposes how we could begin addressing the diversely positioned human as a manifold yet full subject. We argue that International Relations scholarship usually ignores the human altogether or, at best, acknowledges the human in high-level politics drawing on the model based on the theory on rational actorness. Moreover, the analysis of insights gained at our research sites sheds light on the ways in which mobility is unevenly distributed, and how the enactment of mobility is gendered and racialized in complex ways. We conclude the paper by reflecting what these concerns might mean for international relations scholarship at the conjuncture of human im/mobility and security, and for contributing towards mobility justice.
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Relaciones Internacionales
Relaciones Internacionales INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
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