Militarised Indigenous Borderscapes: Reconfiguring geographies of war and borders

Description of the granted funding

This project aims to offer critical insight into the relationship between borders and war as discussed and theorised among geographers and border studies scholars. Contemporary war, especially as led by the United States and its allies, relies on overseas bases that were built on indigenous lands. Indigenous lands remain divided and such (post)colonial bordering continues to affect the lives of local residents. The project will study how militarisation borders indigenous spaces not only politically and territorially but also socially, economically, and culturally. It will also explore how residents contest and negotiate their bordered lives and investigate for the development of distinct border cultures and subjectivities in these spaces. The project will combine textual analysis with ethnographic methods and focus on the cases of Sápmi and Okinawa Island, which are today of great importance in light of the growing militarisation of northern Europe and heightened tensions in East Asia.
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Starting year

2023

End year

2027

Granted funding

Hidefumi Nishiyama Orcid -palvelun logo
725 970 €

Funder

Research Council of Finland

Funding instrument

Academy research fellows

Other information

Funding decision number

354526

Fields of science

Social and economic geography

Research fields

Ihmismaantiede

Identified topics

political history, cultural history