Abstracts Geography

Add abstract

Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!

Search abstract

Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution

Share this abstract

Hidden in plain sight: uncovering migrant geographies in the external borderlands of Europe

by Lina Zachrisson

Institution: Chalmers University of Technology
Department: Chalmers tekniska högskola / Institutionen för arkitektur och samhällsbyggnadsteknik (ACE)
Degree:
Year: 2022
Keywords: borders, irregular migration, human geography, awareness, relational analysis
Posted: 3/25/2025
Record ID: 2274992
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12380/305591


Abstract

This thesis seeks to understand how spatial - built and natural - environments operate in Europe’s external borderlands to facilitate and condition human migration. It aims to find new ways in which architects can engage with authoritarian instruments of power that spatially manifest themselves in and around increasingly militarized border regions. As concepts and spatial instruments, the borders will be viewed through the lenses of human mobility, irregular migration, and the creation of territory. As the Schengen agreement guarantees free movement across all internal borders between member states, the EU sees the need to increase security and control over who and what gets to cross the external borders. Meanwhile, public interest in nationalism and anti-immigration rhetoric continues to grow, rendering displaced populations increasingly vulnerable as they attempt to navigate the European borderlands in search of safe ground. Current European migration policy leaves large populations of migrants trapped in transit countries on Europe’s fringes, in a state of permanent temporality, in-between both humanitarian facilities and legal frameworks. With the support of field investigations and inquiry in the crisis-ridden border regions of North Macedonia, this work tries to understand and visualize the border’s inherently spatial nature and the borderlands as a territory for shaping multiple narratives and geographies of migration. It centers around the connections and socio-spatial relations between the actors and processes that contribute to this production of the migrant narrative. The thesis seeks to uncover converging paths, chains of relations, and hidden dimensions of the realities that migrant populations suffer when crossing borders. Through an uncovering of such intersections and divergencies, the outcomes of this work explore speculative interventions for a more inclusive and socially sustainable narrative of the European borderlands.

Add abstract

Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!

Search abstract

Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution

Share this abstract

Relevant publications

Book cover thumbnail image
Another Boom for Amazonia? Examining the Socioeconomic and Environmental Impl...
by Penn, Jr., James W.
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Informalisation as a Strength Community Survival Systems and Economic Developmen...
by Meintjies, Frank
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Private and Public Sector Collaboration in Guam’s ... Is Guam Prepared for the Future?
by Schumann, Fred R.
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Sermons, Systems and Strategies The Geographic Strategies of the Methodist Episcop...
by Nickerson, Michael G.
   
Book cover thumbnail image
Modeling Carbon Fluxes, Net Primary Production, an...
by Goetz, Scott J.