This book examines changing and emerging state and state-like borders in the post-Soviet space in the decades following state collapse. This book argues border-making is not only about states physical marking of territory and claims to sovereignty but also about peoples spatial practices over time. In order to illustrate how borders come about and are maintained, this book looks at border communities at internal, open administrative borders and borders in the making, as well as physically demarcated international state borders. This book also pays attention to both the spatial and temporal aspects of borders and the interplay between boundaries and borders over time and thus identifies some of the processes at play as space is territorialized in Eurasia in the aftermath of state collapse.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Eurasian Borderlands
Chapter 2 Post-Soviet or Eurasian Lands? Rethinking Analytic Categories in the Ukraine-EU and Russia-China Borderlands
Chapter 3 Dead End: A Spatial History of a Border Town in post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan
Chapter 4 With a Border Fence in the Backyard: Materialization of the Border in the Ferghana Valley
Chapter 5 Across the Enguri Border: Lives Connected and Separated by the Borderland between Georgia and Abkhazia
Chapter 6 Remembering and Living on the Borderlands in the South Caucasus
Chapter 7 Time and Contingency in the Anthropology of Borders: on Border as Event in Rural Central Asia
Chapter 8 Producing territols