{"title":"Why Walls Don't Work, by Michael Dear","authors":"D. Leo","doi":"10.5070/bp326118216","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Berkeley Planning Journal, Volume 26, 2013 Why Walls Won’t Work By Michael Dear Oxford University Press, 2013 Reviewed by Daniela De Leo Michael Dear’s 1 latest book offers a new reading of the vast territory along the US–Mexico border, which he describes as one of “the most misunderstood places on earth” (p. xi). In his first nine chapters, the author describes the main purpose of the wall recently installed on the border. This wall was created with the aim of countering illegal immigration and containing the drug wars fomented by the Mexican cartels. The author then explains “why walls don’t work,” arguing that such borders can be considered largely ineffective and indeed destructive for the space that surrounds them. Professor Dear and his students carried out research for the book while traveling up and down both sides of a border that runs 1,969 miles from Tijuana to Brownsville, focusing on the people who live within this “defensive/offensive system” 2 rather than upon the physical reality of the wall itself. Dear refers to the people who inhabit the “in-between” space between two nation-states as a “third nation” and argues that this third nation, which preexisted the wall, has its own economy, environment, law, politics, and culture. His book is the story of this complex transitional area that may be considered a “nation” despite the fact that it does not itself constitute a nation-state 3 . In his conclusion, Dear notes that people always find ways around the walls. Literally, they pass over them, through them, and around them. This is due to the fact that governments and private interests continue to open passages and gaps in the wall. In order to support his thesis, he reminds us that the demographic composition of the United States has long-since been characterized by a substantial Hispanic population, despite the periodic “resurgence of racism,” while Mexico, despite its many problems, 1. Professor of City and Regional Planning, College of Environmental Design, UC Berkeley. 2. Considerable literature exists on this issue. Peter Marcuse, “Walls as a Metaphor and Reality,” in S. Dunn, Managing Divided Cities (Ryburn Publishing, 1994), 41–52, or Teresa Caldeira, City of Walls (Berkeley: UC Berkeley Press, 2000), give an idea of the debate. 3. But one of the critical questions might be whether this third nation can do anything without being a State?","PeriodicalId":39937,"journal":{"name":"Berkeley Planning Journal","volume":"26 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-07-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Berkeley Planning Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5070/bp326118216","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Berkeley Planning Journal, Volume 26, 2013 Why Walls Won’t Work By Michael Dear Oxford University Press, 2013 Reviewed by Daniela De Leo Michael Dear’s 1 latest book offers a new reading of the vast territory along the US–Mexico border, which he describes as one of “the most misunderstood places on earth” (p. xi). In his first nine chapters, the author describes the main purpose of the wall recently installed on the border. This wall was created with the aim of countering illegal immigration and containing the drug wars fomented by the Mexican cartels. The author then explains “why walls don’t work,” arguing that such borders can be considered largely ineffective and indeed destructive for the space that surrounds them. Professor Dear and his students carried out research for the book while traveling up and down both sides of a border that runs 1,969 miles from Tijuana to Brownsville, focusing on the people who live within this “defensive/offensive system” 2 rather than upon the physical reality of the wall itself. Dear refers to the people who inhabit the “in-between” space between two nation-states as a “third nation” and argues that this third nation, which preexisted the wall, has its own economy, environment, law, politics, and culture. His book is the story of this complex transitional area that may be considered a “nation” despite the fact that it does not itself constitute a nation-state 3 . In his conclusion, Dear notes that people always find ways around the walls. Literally, they pass over them, through them, and around them. This is due to the fact that governments and private interests continue to open passages and gaps in the wall. In order to support his thesis, he reminds us that the demographic composition of the United States has long-since been characterized by a substantial Hispanic population, despite the periodic “resurgence of racism,” while Mexico, despite its many problems, 1. Professor of City and Regional Planning, College of Environmental Design, UC Berkeley. 2. Considerable literature exists on this issue. Peter Marcuse, “Walls as a Metaphor and Reality,” in S. Dunn, Managing Divided Cities (Ryburn Publishing, 1994), 41–52, or Teresa Caldeira, City of Walls (Berkeley: UC Berkeley Press, 2000), give an idea of the debate. 3. But one of the critical questions might be whether this third nation can do anything without being a State?
《伯克利规划杂志》,第26卷,2013年,围墙为什么不起作用牛津大学出版社,2013年,Daniela De Leo评论迈克尔·迪尔的最新著作提供了一个新的阅读沿着美墨边境的广阔领土,他描述为“地球上最被误解的地方”之一(第xi页)。在他的前九章中,作者描述了最近在边境上安装的墙的主要目的。修建这堵墙的目的是打击非法移民,遏制墨西哥贩毒集团挑起的毒品战争。作者接着解释了“为什么墙不起作用”,认为这样的边界在很大程度上是无效的,实际上对周围的空间具有破坏性。迪尔教授和他的学生在从蒂华纳到布朗斯维尔长达1969英里的边境两侧来回旅行时,为这本书进行了研究,他们关注的是生活在这个“防御/进攻系统”内的人们,而不是墙本身的物理现实。迪尔将居住在两个民族国家之间“中间”空间的人称为“第三民族”,并认为这个第三民族在隔离墙之前就存在了,有自己的经济、环境、法律、政治和文化。他的书讲述了这个复杂的过渡地区的故事,尽管它本身并不构成一个民族国家,但它可能被视为一个“民族”。在结论中,迪尔指出,人们总能找到绕过墙壁的方法。从字面上看,它们越过它们,穿过它们,绕过它们。这是因为政府和私人利益集团继续在这堵墙上打开通道和缺口。为了支持他的论点,他提醒我们,美国的人口构成长期以来一直以大量的西班牙裔人口为特征,尽管周期性地“种族主义死灰复燃”,而墨西哥,尽管有许多问题,1。美国加州大学伯克利分校环境设计学院城市与区域规划教授。关于这个问题有相当多的文献。彼得·马尔库塞,“墙作为隐喻和现实”,载于S.邓恩,《管理分裂的城市》(雷伯恩出版社,1994年),41-52页,或特蕾莎·卡尔代拉,《城墙之城》(伯克利:加州大学伯克利分校出版社,2000年),给出了辩论的想法。3.但其中一个关键问题可能是,这第三个国家在没有一个国家的情况下是否可以做任何事情?
期刊介绍:
The Berkeley Planning Journal is an annual peer-reviewed journal, published by graduate students in the Department of City and Regional Planning (DCRP) at the University of California, Berkeley since 1985.