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Vol. 18 No. 1 (2025)

The "Other" Border: On Canada/US Culture, Power, and Politics

Published: 2025-06-30

The US-Canada border is long. Indeed it is the longest undefended land border between two countries in the world today, but few people in the US have thought much about that border over the years and, when they do, it is not likely they think of it in the same way that Canadians are known to, and certainly not in the same way that they think about the US-Mexico border. The Canadian government’s de facto closure of the US-Canada border during much of the Covid-19 pandemic probably shocked many people in the US and, while the narrative about its closure certainly played out differently in Canada, in both countries it heightened focus on the border as a limit more than a uniting zone. It made the border politically visible.

In this special issue of RIAS we address a number of issues about the border, drawing on perspectives from multiple disciplines in the social sciences and humanities, from anthropology to political science, economics and literature, and including the works of scholars based in Canada, the US and Germany. Their works engage issues of Indigeneity, African-descendant populations, Franco-Canadians, Gender and Race, Colonialisms, and the more than human world. Topics include hunting, cross-border Indigenous relations, treaties, oil protests, immigration, domestic workers, historical memory, creative fiction, and the notions of borders as textures, zones, lines, connections, and cultural imaginaries. Our emphasis on combining social science and humanities approaches is an essential part of this work. Much previous work on the Canada-US border has tended to focus either on political/legal issues or on literary/media studies. We strive instead to bring multiple disciplinary perspectives into conversation here, and also include artistic/visual work. This volume thus contributes to a broader project than one that would center on nationalist interests—either the US or Canada’s—and rather brings to the study of bordering practices and border theory a continental approach, one that attends to the places and spaces that are and/or become the border. (Read more in Jasmin Habib and Jane Desmond's Introduction).

Number of Publications: 12

RIAS vol. 18 (1/2025) Table of Contents

ED/NOTE

The Canada/US Border: An International Boundary as Continental Cross-Section

Nathaniel R. Racine
Language: EN | Published: 30-06-2025 | Abstract | pp. 5-19


INTRO

Preface: The “Other” Border and the Present Moment

Virginia R. Dominguez
Language: EN | Published: 13-02-2025 | Abstract | pp. 21-24

Introduction: Culture, Politics, and the Canada-US Border

Jasmin Habib , Jane Desmond
Language: EN | Published: 01-02-2025 | Abstract | pp. 25-48


FEATURES

Indigenous Diaspora, Identity, and Settler Colonial Borders

Rowland Keshena Robinson
Language: EN | Published: 03-01-2025 | Abstract | pp. 49-63

Mobile Borders in Contemporary Francophone Canadian Literature

Adina Balint
Language: EN | Published: 03-01-2025 | Abstract | pp. 65-79

Oil Pipeline Resistance in Canada and the US: Similarities, Cross Border Alliances and Border Effects

Paul Bowles
Language: EN | Published: 03-01-2025 | Abstract | pp. 81-104

Border Crossings and Polar Bears: How Indigenous Hunting Rights in Canada Become Part of a Transnational Economy

Jane Desmond
Language: EN | Published: 30-06-2025 | Abstract | pp. 105-127

On Amending the 1916 Migratory Birds Convention: Indigenous Reflections and Priorities

Philip Awashish , Jasmin Habib
Language: EN | Published: 03-01-2025 | Abstract | pp. 129-153

Drawing the Medicine Line: Bordertextures in Whoop-Up Country

Astrid M. Fellner
Language: EN | Published: 03-01-2025 | Abstract | pp. 155-180

Rethinking the ‘Other’ Border: Caribbean Migration to Canada

Karen Flynn
Language: EN | Published: 29-01-2025 | Abstract | pp. 181-203

Afterword: Border Theory in Practice North of the US-Mexican Borderlands - Further Perspectives on the Canada-US Border

Alejandro Lugo
Language: EN | Published: 24-01-2025 | Abstract | pp. 205-217


REVIEWS

Hospitable Linguistics: Alternative, Indigenous and Critical Approaches to Language Research and Language Encounters edited by Nicholas G. Faraclas, Anna Storch, and Viveka Velupillai (A Book Review)

Monika Grotek
Language: EN | Published: 30-06-2025 | Abstract | pp. 219-224


Vol. 18 No. 1 (2025)
Published: 2025-06-30



eISSN: 1991-2773
Logo DOI 10.31261/RIAS

Publisher
University of Silesia Press

Licence CC

Licencja CC BY-SA

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