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BIALASIEWICZ, LUIZA (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   075100


Death of the west: Samuel Huntington, Oriana Fallaci and a new moral geopolitics of births and bodies / Bialasiewicz, Luiza   Journal Article
Bialasiewicz, Luiza Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract The 'War on Terror' has justified a whole new set of re-territorialisations of security and identity, also in the 'West'. In this paper, I highlight one particularly powerful aspect of the idea of the 'West under threat': one wedded to the idea of a demographic-reproductive menace. Such ideas are not only the prerogative of extremist fringes, for the two authors whose work is discussed in this piece are very much part of the mainstream: Samuel Huntington, whose latest book Who Are We? America's Great Debate focuses on the 'deconstruction' of American identity and the threat represented by hyper-fertile immigrant populations and Italian writer-journalist Oriana Fallaci, whose two most recent books have launched an offensive against the 'Islamic Reverse Crusade' that threatens to 'submerge and subjugate' Europe. Certainly, the intimations of a 'threat' to the West are in no way new, nor are they a unique product of the 'War on Terror'. What is new, however, is the force with which they are being articulated today and the ways in which they are entering into popular circulation, in both Europe and America. What is more, on both sides of the Atlantic, those raising the sound of alarm for 'The Death of the West' prescribe not only a re-affirmation of (Western) ideals, but also - and increasingly - a set of policies for the biological survival of the West. 'The Death of the West' is thus not only a parable of political and geopolitical decline, but also a morality play regarding real deaths and, especially, real births.
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2
ID:   074798


New geopolitics of division and the problem of a Kantian Europe / Elden, Stuart; Bialasiewicz, Luiza   Journal Article
Elden, Stuart Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract Immanuel Kant is today often invoked as an emblematic figure for Europe. In works by thinkers such as Zygmunt Bauman, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and Jürgen Habermas, among others, Kant's work stands as a core reference for discussions of the European Modern and the legacy of the Enlightenment, even if this appropriation is not uncritical. The spectre of Kant also haunts Europe in more pedestrian understandings of the ideal. Prominent politicians such as Gerhard Schroeder, Joschka Fischer, Dominique de Villepin and Romano Prodi have all paid tribute to his influence, while in a variety of popular-academic texts Kant's 'cosmopolitical' dream has been invoked as a paradigm for Europe - if not a shorthand for the European social model tout court.
Key Words Geopolitics  Europe  Immanuel Kant 
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3
ID:   117440


Off-shoring and out-sourcing the borders of Europe: Libya and EU border work in the Mediterranean / Bialasiewicz, Luiza   Journal Article
Bialasiewicz, Luiza Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The article examines some of the novel ways in which the European Union carries out its 'border-work'- border-work that stretches far beyond the external borders of the current Union. It highlights, in particular, the role of EUrope's neighbours in new strategies of securitisation, drawing attention to some of the actors, sites and mechanisms that make the Union's border-work possible. The emphasis in the paper is on the Mediterranean, long the premier laboratory for creative solutions to the policing of EU borders. The discussion focuses predominantly on a difficult neighbour turned 'friend' - Libya - and its role in the EUropean archipelago of border-work.
Key Words European Union  Europe  Mediterranean  Libya  Securitisation  EU Border 
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