2022
DOI: 10.1007/s10612-022-09666-5
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Border Control Reinterpreted: Collective Memory and the Narrative Self

Abstract: This article explores the potential of historical narratives to inform and guide action, taking the case of border control in Hungary. The Hungarian government has recently criminalised irregular border crossing and made a comparison between the Ottoman Occupation and contemporary challenges of mass migration to legitimise its new measures. Qualitative interviews conducted in 2019 seem to suggest that some members of the border police, consciously or unconsciously, have drawn from this narrative repertoire to … Show more

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