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CHECKPOINTS (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   183440


Mongolian-Chinese border: transformation of frontier infrastructure and impact of the silk road economic belt / Namzhilova, Victoria ; Batomunkuyev, Valentin   Journal Article
Namzhilova, Victoria Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article deals with specific features in the development of frontier infrastructure on the Mongolian-Chinese border. Noting the fast development of foreign trade relations between Mongolia and China, the authors examine changes taking place in the frontier area. They focus on the current system of checkpoints and also on the prospects for opening new border crossings, in connection primarily with the export of mineral resources. The research was carried out under the direction of the Buryat Scientific Center of the RAS SB and the Baikal Institute of Nature Management of the RAS SB.
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2
ID:   178343


Women and checkpoints in Palestine / Griffiths, Mark; Repo, Jemima   Journal Article
Repo, Jemima Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The objective of this article is to bring Palestinian women to the centre of a discussion about the gendered dimensions of Israel’s convoluted permit system and checkpoint security infrastructure. Drawing on fieldwork close to one of the largest checkpoint terminals in the West Bank, Checkpoint 300 between Bethlehem and Jerusalem, the article develops knowledge about checkpoints in three important ways: i) as gendered spaces that regulate women’s mobility differently from that of men; ii) as spaces that produce particular embodied experiences for women; and iii) as security mechanisms that disrupt and regulate relations of care. This knowledge builds towards the main argument of the article: Palestinian women’s lives are profoundly affected by Israel’s imposition of permit systems and checkpoints in terms of highly gendered impositions of (im)mobility, embodied experience and relations of care. The research presented here thus makes two wider contributions to research on security to do with how the checkpoint brings the politics of gender and occupation to the fore, and how security infrastructure connects to the politics of care under military occupation.
Key Words Palestine  Israel  Military Occupation  Mobility  Checkpoints  Gender and Security 
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