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Intimate bordering: Intimacy,anti-blackness and gender violence in the making of the Dominican border
Institution:1. Department of Political Science, Federal University Otuoke, Bayelsa State, Nigeria;2. Department of Political Science, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State, Nigeria;3. Department of Political Sciences, University of Pretoria, South Africa;1. University of the Free State, UK;2. University of Birmingham and Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study, UK;1. Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, UK;2. School of Geography, Environmental Management and Energy Studies, University of Johannesburg, South Africa;1. College of Forestry, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, PR China;2. College of Civil Engineering, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, PR China;3. Department of Environment – Soil Physics Unit, Ghent University, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium;4. Earth and Life Institute (ELI), Université Catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain), Georges Lemaître Centre for Earth and Climate Research (TECLIM), 3 Place Louis Pasteur, B-1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium;5. Physical Geography and Environmental Change, Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Basel, Klingelbergstr. 27, 4056 Basel, Switzerland
Abstract:This article proposes the term Intimate Bordering to explain the role of intimacy and social reproduction in the active process of border-making and statecraft. The concept contributes to understanding daily experiences of bordering among subaltern subjects who make and contest the border every day and yet are often unaccounted for. The concept sheds light on how racialized and gendered relations of power intrinsic to antiblackness and cis-hetero-patriarchy interweave and condition spatial politics and belonging. These arguments are developed by bridging border studies and black and feminist geographies, and by centering the experiences of Haitian women who work as domestic workers in Dominican border towns. The article is based on fieldwork carried out in four Dominican and Haitian border towns, including interviews, focus groups and participant observation focused on the everyday commutes of Haitian domestic workers who live in Haiti and work in the Dominican Republic (DR). It analyzes two sets of intimate border practices that take place at two official border crossings: the first set includes normalized forms of intimate violence and humiliation at the border; the second examines the failed attempt at institutionalizing the transborder mobilities of domestic workers based on colonial entitlements of control over the bodies of black Haitian women. Centering intimacy in bordering brings transnational livelihoods, social reproduction and racialization into the heart of the analysis of statecraft projects in the space of the Afro-Caribbean.
Keywords:Border  Gender  Intimate  Race  Geopolitics  Caribbean
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