2017
DOI: 10.7765/9781526117632
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Borders and conflict in South Asia

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Cited by 9 publications
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“…Chester has argued that the Punjab border provided a 'safe space' for those who were driven by crime, offering a departure from the sovereignty of the state. 12 While this volume is situated in this scholarship, it also directly investigates how the neighbours parted by the 1947 Partition continued to correspond with each other long after the drawing of the Radcliffe boundary, regardless of the imperatives of state-building as the new states sought to decide who could and could not enter their territorial boundaries. This study considers cross-border mobilities as a reality of life at the Punjab borderland, a necessary condition of patron-client network, and depicts a border that was often vibrant, transgressed, resourceful and connected to the larger transnational world.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chester has argued that the Punjab border provided a 'safe space' for those who were driven by crime, offering a departure from the sovereignty of the state. 12 While this volume is situated in this scholarship, it also directly investigates how the neighbours parted by the 1947 Partition continued to correspond with each other long after the drawing of the Radcliffe boundary, regardless of the imperatives of state-building as the new states sought to decide who could and could not enter their territorial boundaries. This study considers cross-border mobilities as a reality of life at the Punjab borderland, a necessary condition of patron-client network, and depicts a border that was often vibrant, transgressed, resourceful and connected to the larger transnational world.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%