By Polly Pallister-Wilkins
The last decade has seen an increase in the process of
wall and fence building that seems somewhat incongruous in an era of apparent
unprecedented globalisation and human movement. Britain
got over its penchant for building walls as a policy solution to the
sectarianism of Northern
Ireland and the subsequent peace process was
hailed as a triumph of liberal inclusion, even if the walls themselves
remained. The same cannot be said for elsewhere however. Recent moves by Greece
to fence off part of its border with Turkey, Israel's continued use of fence
building, India's Bangladesh border fence and Spain's re-fortifying of its
exclaves, Ceuta and Melilla are just a few examples of a process of walling
that is seen as a logical policy response to a range of diverse threats.
Dr Polly Pallister-Wilkins
Cities and states have historically sought to protect themselves through the construction of walls and fences. From the moats and drawbridges of old to the modern day high-tech motion sensor fences of today this is a process as old as human settlement itself. But as a policy response to a host of divergent problems – terrorism, nationalist movements, environmental degradation, refugees, migrants, organised crime and smuggling – it is somewhat lacking in imagination. If only because the policy of walling seems to be one that requires ever more fences to respond to problems caused by those that went before.
Here the example of
Human ingenuity for technological solutions to social problems is matched only by human ingenuity in finding ways quite literally around such technological solutions. In an example of this, the Israeli government – having realised that migrant routes, being fluid and reactive are liable to change, heading across the Red Sea and into
But why? In the same week when Turkey's Foreign Minister on a visit to Brussels reacted with sadness at Greece's fence building project in Evros, saying that it was an act of division between the EU and the outside world. Echoing the carefully honed liberal rhetoric of the EU itself Egemen Bagis said
Of course walls and fences are always more than just symbols. They are real material structures meant to deter, block and create a sense of security, whether or not they in fact do any such thing. The efficacy of walls and fences to actually provide the much needed security against threat that they promise is worthy of critical reflection as such reflection exposes such fence building to be the lazy policy solution that it is.
Let's take the Evros fence. The fence will run for 12.5km along the Greek-Turkish border and while situated to reflect the pressure of migratory flows the Greek-Turkish border is considerably longer than 12.5km. Will
Let's also take the fences of
Fences are seemingly an easy solution to a growing sense of domestic uneasiness. They are borne out of causes as concrete as economic recession and its social consequences or as un-tangible and divergent as threats from terrorism and climate change. Yet this reassertion of good-old-fashioned state sovereignty fails to provide the panacea they claim. Instead a greater need for walls and fences, burden shifting and isolation, is created. What is clear is that building a fence to guard against the effects of climate change will stop the tide, but won't prevent its creation.
Dr Polly Pallister-Wilkins is a Senior Teaching Fellow in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the
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Tuesday,
14 February 2012 12:01 AM
http://www.politics.co.uk/comment-analysis/2012/02/14/comment-fences-don-t-make-us-safe