“We are sitting on a time bomb”: a multiperspectival approach to inter-national development at an East African Border
“We are sitting on a time bomb”: a multiperspectival approach to inter-national development at an East African Border
Recent discussion in critical border studies has reaffirmed the validity and necessity of multiperspectival approaches which move beyond state-centric outlooks to include diverse viewpoints of people at or on borders. One understudied aspect of everyday border life involves how international development organisations fit within wider dynamics of cross-border activities. Drawing upon experiences of development projects at a key border crossing between Kenya and Uganda, I explore (1) how perceptions of risk and danger contribute to constructions of the border towns as places in need of development interventions, and (2) how this border also adds to practical and logistical concerns already held by development organisations as they deliver these interventions. I argue that the place-based mix of location, material forms, and perceptions or practices impacts how ‘inter-national development’ is rationalised in border regions.
381-403
Allen, William L.
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
6 April 2015
Allen, William L.
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Allen, William L.
(2015)
“We are sitting on a time bomb”: a multiperspectival approach to inter-national development at an East African Border.
Geopolitics, 20 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/14650045.2014.994609).
Abstract
Recent discussion in critical border studies has reaffirmed the validity and necessity of multiperspectival approaches which move beyond state-centric outlooks to include diverse viewpoints of people at or on borders. One understudied aspect of everyday border life involves how international development organisations fit within wider dynamics of cross-border activities. Drawing upon experiences of development projects at a key border crossing between Kenya and Uganda, I explore (1) how perceptions of risk and danger contribute to constructions of the border towns as places in need of development interventions, and (2) how this border also adds to practical and logistical concerns already held by development organisations as they deliver these interventions. I argue that the place-based mix of location, material forms, and perceptions or practices impacts how ‘inter-national development’ is rationalised in border regions.
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Published date: 6 April 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 499740
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499740
PURE UUID: 6b8ecb32-6c27-4d34-8d23-f299a9cec2d9
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Date deposited: 01 Apr 2025 17:00
Last modified: 26 Apr 2025 02:12
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William L. Allen
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