跨境基础设施治理机制:加拿大-美国边境设施的比较研究

IF 0.3 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Dylan S. McLean, Munroe Eagles
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文考察了围绕一种被忽视但重要的跨境机构类型而发展起来的治理制度:管理和运营跨越水界连接加拿大和美国的物理基础设施的组织。在陆地过境点,不需要必须共同管理和维护的共享基础设施。但是,在由水道(湖泊或河流)形成的加拿大南部- -美国北部边界3538公里(占整个边界的55%)沿线,需要一些共同管理的有形基础设施来连接两国。总共有25座车桥或隧道提供了跨越这条水界的物理连接,其中包括沿整个边界最繁忙的过境点,无论是货运(底特律/温莎带头)还是客运(尼亚加拉过境点最重)。这些有形基础设施资源的成功管理对两国都非常重要,其中许多跨境设施已成为跨国友好的有力象征。尽管可以说,美加水界边境设施运营商面临的挑战大体相似,但已经出现了各种各样的共享桥梁和隧道的管理和治理模式。本文依赖于对7个边境过境管理制度(总共有18个独立的边境过境设施)内的设施经理和执行人员的半结构化访谈,并主要关注跨越纽约-安大略省和密歇根-安大略省边境的设施。通过对正式结构的公开描述和访谈,我们研究了边界双方的利益和观点如何被容纳在这些设施的不同治理制度中。我们还探讨了设施运营商对两国背景所带来的挑战的各种反应;证券化的影响和新的过境要求;以及该基金在促进社区一级跨界关系方面的作用。由此可见,边境设施一般运作良好,并对其任务作出反应。然而,我们能够记录边境基础设施运营商面临的一些持久挑战。这些因素在很大程度上限制了这些设施的性能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Governance Regimes for Cross-Border Infrastructure: A Comparative Study of Facilities on the Canada–United States Border
This article examines the governance regimes that have developed around a neglected but significant type of cross-border institution: the organizations that manage and operate the physical infrastructure that links Canada with the United States across a water border. On land border crossings, no shared infrastructure that must be jointly managed and maintained is required. However, along the 3538 km of the southern Canada–northern United States border (55 per cent of the entire border) that is formed by a waterway (lake or river), some jointly managed physical infrastructure is necessary to link the countries. There are a total of 25 vehicular bridges or tunnels that provide a physical connection across this water border, and these include the busiest crossing points along the entire border in terms of both freight (where Detroit/Windsor leads the way) and passenger traffic (which is heaviest at the Niagara crossings). The successful management of these physical infrastructure resources is of great importance to both countries, and many of these cross-border facilities have become potent symbols of cross-national comity. Though arguably the challenges facing border facility operators are generally similar along the Canada–United States water border, a wide variety of models for the management and governance of shared bridges and tunnels have emerged. This article relies on semi-structured interviews with facility managers and executives within seven border crossing governance regimes (accounting for a total of 18 separate border crossing facilities) and focuses primarily on those spanning the , New York–Ontario, and Michigan-Ontario borders. Through published descriptions of the formal structures and the interviews, we examine the ways in which interests and perspectives from the two sides of the border are accommodated in the diverse governance regimes of these facilities. We also explore the various responses of facility operators to the challenges posed by the binational context; the impact of securitization and new border crossing requirements; and the facility’s role in fostering cross-border relationships at the community level. From this, it is clear that border facilities are generally well operated and responsive to their mission. However, we are able to document some enduring challenges faced by the operators of border infrastructure. These constrain the performance of these facilities in significant ways.
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