Academic literature on the topic 'Frontier conflict'

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Journal articles on the topic "Frontier conflict"

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Orlov, Y. "FRONTIER AS A CATEGORY OF CRIMINOLOGICAL DISCOURSE." Archives of Criminology and Forensic Sciences 1 (June 16, 2020): 98–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.32353/acfs.1.2020.08.

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The significance of frontiers has been actualizing in the modern world as border zones, in which there is a diffusion of social and group differences, interaction of cultures, narratives, clash of civilizations. These areas are filled with conflicts of diverse nature, genesis, reproduction of which often contains significant criminogenic potential, manifested frontal crime. They have not as much a physical spatial, geographical, as a socio-temporal dimension, the spaces of existence of which unfold in the sphere of discourse, thinking, and are provided with an extensive, global telecommunication infrastructure. The purpose of the article is to establish, describe and explain the content of the category «frontier» as an element of criminological discourse. The frontier is defined as a border and borderzone between cultures, epochs in the actual calendar, physical time; it is a place of active interaction, clash of civilizations, cultures; the opposition, determined by the state of struggle, implicitly presupposes expansion and protection, a state of hostility, anxiety, and sacrifice. Frontier crime is a type of crime determined by conflicts in the area of social frontiers. Specific evidence of committing frontal crime: 1) it’s a conflict of identities; 2) has a political and/or religious motivation, however security-dominant and solidarity motivation; 3) aggressive and violent in nature; 4) depends on historical and/or religious-dogmatic (fundamentalist) consciousness, relies on the mechanisms of postmemory, radicalized discourse, actualized memes, symbols. In the global dimension, the implementation of frontal crime is explained by the mechanisms of the development of conflict between cultures. In the national – there have been identified three types of frontier crime: transitive, immanent, and postmodern anomie. Operating the frontier as a category of criminological discourse provides opportunities for a deeper study of the determination of political crime in Ukraine, as well as for the development of strategies for general social development (including in the context of combating crime) taking into account the socio-cultural frontier. Perspective areas of criminological research of the frontier is the study of the influence of the border and cross-border on the promotion of extremism, terrorism, taking into account its importance while designing and implementing the concept of transitional justice, as well as the peculiarities of constitution of frontier identity as an anti-criminal basis.
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Rogers, T. D. "La Frontera: Forests and Ecological Conflict in Chile's Frontier Territory." Hispanic American Historical Review 95, no. 2 (January 1, 2015): 371–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2874800.

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Holmes, George. "La Frontera: Forests and Ecological Conflict in Chile's Frontier Territory." AAG Review of Books 3, no. 3 (July 3, 2015): 111–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2325548x.2015.1050761.

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Soluri, John. "La Frontera: Forests and Ecological Conflict in Chile's Frontier Territory." Journal of Historical Geography 52 (April 2016): 118–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2015.06.006.

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Barua, Taz. "Return of the Frontier." Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 42, no. 3 (August 2017): 107–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0304375417753185.

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The colony in British India had at one time designed an inner line to distinguish two separate systems of administration for the frontier areas and the nonfrontier areas of colonial Northeast India. Constructing the frontiers as areas of strife and conflict and from which the nonfrontiers always needed to be secured, the British in creating the line made an instrument of policing the frontiers that has not only persisted but transgressed the colonial administrative structure into the postcolonial era. Although it was designed really for the protection of the nonfrontier areas of Assam from the raiding of the hill tribes of the frontier, in implementation the line prohibited non-natives of the frontiers from adopting interest in land or products of land located behind it. Contemporary movements demanding an inner line in three states of Northeast India have gone back to the idea of a line that divides the territory into two nonhomogenous areas, disallowing non-natives within the inner line from an extended involvement in the areas outside of the line, thus, refrontierizing themselves and giving them the peculiar characteristics of the frontier, wanting to lend themselves an exterior identity that is distinct from the identity of the regular nonfrontier territory in India.
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Gizelis, Theodora-Ismene, and Michelle Benson. "Advancing the Frontier of Peacekeeping Research." Journal of Conflict Resolution 63, no. 7 (July 8, 2019): 1595–600. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022002718821709.

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The impact of United Nations (UN) peacekeeping on conflict has received a sustained amount of attention in the empirical literature. The advent of new data on UN peacekeeping and new temporal units of analysis have enabled researchers to expand the frontiers of peacekeeping research and undertake a more nuanced examination of peacekeeping effectiveness. In this special section, a series of articles examine how UN peacekeeping affects different types of violence within conflicts and leads to different types of peaceful outcomes. Factors such as the cultural affinity between peacekeepers and local communities, the size of peacekeeping operations and the specific composition of UN forces are shown to be important variables associated with lower levels of casualties and violence and also a higher likelihood of mediation and timely peaceful settlements in civil wars. In the aggregate, these articles suggest that robust peacekeeping is associated with better outcomes in many stages of conflict.
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Young, Mary E. "Conflict Resolution on the Indian Frontier." Journal of the Early Republic 16, no. 1 (1996): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3124282.

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Barker, Bryce. "Massacre, Frontier Conflict and Australian Archaeology." Australian Archaeology 64, no. 1 (June 2007): 9–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2007.11681844.

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Langer, Erick D. "The Eastern Andean Frontier (Bolivia and Argentina) and Latin American Frontiers: Comparative Contexts (19th and 20th Centuries)." Americas 59, no. 1 (July 2002): 33–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tam.2002.0077.

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The epic struggles between Mexicans and the Apaches and Comanches in the far northern reaches of the Spanish empire and the conflict between gauchos and Araucanians in the pampas in the far south are the images the mind conjures up when thinking of Latin American frontiers. We must now add for the twentieth century the dense Amazon jungle as one of the last frontiers in popular (and scholarly) minds. However, these images ignore the eastern Andean and Chaco frontier area, one of the most vital and important frontier regions in Latin America since colonial times, today divided up into three different countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay) in the heart of the South American continent. This frontier region has not received sufficient attention from scholars despite its importance in at least three different aspects: First, the indigenous peoples were able to remain independent of the Creole states much longer than elsewhere other than the Amazon. Secondly, indigenous labor proved to be vitally important to the economic development along the fringes, and thirdly, a disastrous war was fought over the region in the 1930s by Bolivia and Paraguay. This essay provides an overview based on primary and secondary sources of the history of the eastern Andean frontier and compares it to other frontiers in Latin America. It thus endeavors to contribute to frontier studies by creating categories of analysis that make possible the comparisons between different frontiers in Latin America and placing within the scholarly discussion the eastern Andean region during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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Kolås, Åshild. "Northeast Indian Enigmas." Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 42, no. 3 (August 2017): 99–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0304375418761072.

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The standard frame of security studies is to view Northeast India as a site of multiple “ethnic conflicts.” In trying to unravel these conflicts, the focus has remained on the fault lines between the state and its alleged contenders, the region’s multiple nonstate actors. This special issue tries to look at the conflict scenario of Northeast India through a different set of lenses, in an effort to draw the focus away from the usual conflict histories, to direct attention toward the ideas that underpin the construction of Northeast India as a frontier zone and its people as “others,” both internally divided and divided from the Indian mainstream. The “tribal” movements of Northeast India, and the patterns of conflict associated with them, are well researched. What this issue explores is how and why tribal political projects are created and pursued, and how to understand these projects, whether as strategies of resistance and survival, identity politics, or rival projects of extraction and exploitation. What do we find when we look into the enigmatic frontier as a “zone of anomie,” a “sensitive space,” or a parapolitical scene that defies the taken-for-granted dichotomies between the state and nonstate?
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Frontier conflict"

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Moyer, Paul Benjamin. "Wild Yankees: Settlement, conflict, and localism along Pennsylvania's northeast frontier, 1760-1820." W&M ScholarWorks, 1999. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539623949.

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Pennsylvania's northeast frontier---a region embraced by the upper reaches of the Delaware and Susquehanna Rivers---was the scene of a bitter and, at times, bloody backwoods dispute. Here Yankees (settlers and speculators holding deeds from Connecticut land companies) fought Pennamites (settlers and landlords who claimed land under Pennsylvania) for land and authority. This contest began in the 1760s and lasted till the first decade of the nineteenth century and, for a time, pitted Connecticut against Pennsylvania in a bitter jurisdictional conflict. This study focuses on the dispute after the revolutionary war when the federal government awarded the contested territory to Pennsylvania and when Connecticut claimants, who became known as Wild Yankees, violently resisted the imposition of Pennsylvania's authority and soil rights.;This study explores agrarian unrest in northeast Pennsylvania and adds to existing backcountry scholarship by demonstrating that the revolutionary frontier was not only the scene of a battle over land and authority but also the locus of a struggle over identity and the definition of local culture. It analyzes how frontier expansion, the Revolution, class conflict, and disputes over property intersected with the daily lives of ordinary men and women by examining the small-scale social networks (family, kin, and neighborhood) that delimitated their lives.;This study makes two closely connected arguments. First, it contends that backcountry inhabitants' local lives---the social relationships, economic networks, and sources of authority that operated on a face-to-face level---framed their aspirations as well as their perceptions of the Revolution and social conflict. This parochial world view, or localism, played an important role in shaping frontier expansion and frontier unrest. Second, it argues that localism, though it had always been present in agrarian society, became a paramount ingredient of identity and ideology in the backcountry between the mid-eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Rapid frontier expansion combined with the Revolution to create a distinct parochial world view among settlers that can best be described as revolutionary backcountry localism .
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Danvers, Gail D. "Dark clouds gathering : contact, conflict, and cultural dislocation on the Anglo-Iroquois frontier, 1740s-1770s." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.394285.

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Speller, P. "Political mediation on the pioneer frontier : The role of law, bureaucracy and violence on the Amazon region of Brazil." Thesis, University of Essex, 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.384543.

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Gomes, Luís Emílio. "Entre déspotas e heróis: conflitos pela terra em Campos dos Goytacases e suas visões na historiografia (1674-1752)." reponame:Repositório Institucional da UFF, 2014. https://appdesenv.uff.br/riuff/handle/1/346.

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Submitted by Maria Dulce (mdulce@ndc.uff.br) on 2014-07-30T19:18:34Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Gomes, Luis-Dissert-2014.pdf: 572926 bytes, checksum: 55b561563d5bdaa8399cb6de72082d88 (MD5)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-07-30T19:18:34Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Gomes, Luis-Dissert-2014.pdf: 572926 bytes, checksum: 55b561563d5bdaa8399cb6de72082d88 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014
A dissertação aqui apresentada pretendeu analisar o histórico conflituoso da região de Campos dos Goytacazes desde os primeiros contatos entre os indígenas ocupantes da região, os Goytacazes, e os colonizadores portugueses, com foco no principal conflito ocorrido na região, o do donatário Visconde de Asseca contra os grandes proprietários da região. Paralela à pesquisa citada, analisaremos também duas das principais obras escritas sobre o passado de Campos, datadas do início do século XX, realizadas por Julio Feydit e Alberto Lamego. Procuraremos perceber as discussões inclusas nos trabalhos dos citados autores, suas características e sua influência na historiografia posterior. Tais discussões têm como pano de fundo o histórico de ocupação da terra na área.
The presented dissertation sought to examine the historical conflicted of the region of Goytacases since the first contacts between the indigenous occupants of the region, Goytacases, and Portuguese colonizers focusing on the main conflict occurred in the region, the done Viscount Asseca against large landowners in the region. Parallel to the above research, we also analyze two major written about past Campos, tating from the early twentieth century, written by Julio Feydit and Alberto Lamego. We will try to understand the discussions included in the work of these authors, their characteristics and their influence on later historiography. Such discussions are as background historical occupation of land in the area.
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Carter, Daniel Barnaby. "Narratives of nation, frontier and social conflict in Chile : the province of Cautín during the agrarian reform period, 1967-1973." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2013. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.648297.

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Siddiqi, Ahmad Mujtaba. "From bilateralism to Cold War conflict : Pakistan's engagement with state and non-state actors on its Afghan frontier, 1947-1989." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e904bd42-76e9-4c73-8414-dbd7049eb30f.

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The purpose of this thesis is to assess Pakistan’s relationship with Afghanistan before and after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. I argue that the nature of the relationship was transformed by the region becoming the centre of Cold War conflict, and show how Pakistan’s role affected the development of the mujahidin insurgency against Soviet occupation. My inquiry begins by assessing the historical determinants of the relationship, arising from the colonial legacy and local interpretations of the contested spheres of legitimacy proffered by state, tribe and Islam. I then map the trajectory of the relationship from Pakistan’s independence in 1947, showing how the retreat of great power rivalry following British withdrawal from the subcontinent allowed for the framing of the relationship in primarily bilateral terms. The ascendance of bilateral factors opened greater possibilities for accommodation than had previously existed, though the relationship struggled to free itself of inherited colonial disputes, represented by the Pashtunistan issue. The most promising attempt to resolve the dispute came to an end with the communist coup and subsequent Soviet invasion, which subsumed bilateral concerns under the framework of Cold War confrontation. Viewing the invasion as a major threat, Pakistan pursued negotiations for Soviet withdrawal, aligned itself with the US and gave clandestine support to the mujahidin insurgency. External support enhanced mujahidin military viability while exacerbating weaknesses in political organization and ideology. Soviet withdrawal in 1989 left an unresolved conflict. Faced with state collapse and turmoil across the border, heightened security concerns following loss of US support, and intensified links among non-state actors on both sides of the frontier, the Pakistan government drew on its recently gained experience of working through non-state actors to attempt to maintain its influence in Afghanistan. There would be no return to the relatively stable state-state ties prevailing before 1979.
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Christensen, R. O. "Conflict and change among the Khyber Afridis : a study of British policy and tribal society on the North-West Frontier, 1839-1947." Thesis, University of Leicester, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/2381/35540.

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This thesis is concerned with the relationship between one of the most important of the 'independent' Pakhtun tribes of the North-West Frontier and the British-Indian government during its century of administration of this strategically sensitive region. The study is based mainly on previously unconsulted records in the India Office Library and Records, London, and in archives in Pakistan. Additional material has been obtained through interviews with tribesmen, and with past and present frontier officials. Following the Introduction, the thesis is divided into four parts Part I surveys the most important aspects of tribal social organisation. Particular attention is given to those features of the Afridi economy, value-system and political structure which influenced or were influenced by the tribe's relationship with external government. The analysis, although based largely on historical material, includes a critical examination of relevant anthropological theory. Part II examines the strategic considerations underlying British policy on the North-West Frontier and government efforts to establish a satisfactory system of tribal 'management'. There is a detailed analysis of the effectiveness of such measures as the patient of tribal allowances and attempts to work through the traditional tribal leadership. Part III considers the impact of demographic growth, the opening up of new sources of income, and the development of new means of communication on Afridi society. In the long run such changes contributed to political tensions within the tribe, and generated new forms of conflict between tribe and government. Part IV looks at the main areas of conflict between the Afridis and the British administration, including such matters as tribal raiding. There is an analytical case- study of the tribal rising of 1897. Considerable attention is also given to the evolution of Afridi politics in the 20th century, under the influence of such factors as Afghan policy and Indian nationalism.
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Grguric, Nicolas Grguric, and eqeta@yahoo com au. "Fortified Homesteads: The Architecture of Fear in Frontier South Australia and the Northern Territory, ca 1847-1885." Flinders University. Humanities, 2007. http://catalogue.flinders.edu.au./local/adt/public/adt-SFU20080225.161715.

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This thesis is an investigation into the use of defensive architectural techniques by civilian settlers in frontier South Australia and the Northern Territory between 1847 and 1885. By focussing specifically on the civilian use of defensive architecture, this study opens a new approach to the archaeological investigation and interpretation of Australian rural buildings, an approach that identifies defensive strategies as a feature of Australian frontier architecture. Four sites are analysed in this study area, three of which are located in South Australia and one in the Northern Territory. When first built, the structures investigated were not intended, or expected, to become what they did - their construction was simply the physical expression of the fear felt by some of the colonial settlers of Australia. Over time, however, the stories attached to these structures have come to play a significant part in Australia’s frontier mythology. These structures represent physical manifestations of settler fear and Aboriginal resistance. Essentially fortified homesteads, they comprise a body of material evidence previously overlooked and unacknowledged in Australian archaeology, yet they are highly significant in terms of what they can tell us about frontier conflict, in relation to the mindsets and experiences of the settlers who built them. This architecture also constitutes material evidence of a vanguard of Australian colonisation (or invasion) being carried out, not by the military or police, but by civilian settlers. v Apart from this, these structures play a part in the popular mythology of Australia’s colonial past. All of these structures have a myth associated with them, describing them as having been built for defence against Aboriginal attack. These myths are analysed in terms of why they came into existence, why they have survived, and what role they play in the construction of Australia’s national identity. Drawn from, and substantiated through, the material evidence of the homesteads, these myths are one component of a wider body of myths which serve the ideological needs of the settler society through justifying its presence by portraying the settlers as victims of Aboriginal aggression.
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Sikes, Graydon R. "Henry Farny’s Paintings of American Indians, 1894-1916: Images of Conflict Between Indians and Whites Evolve into Symbolic Representations of the Demise of the Western Frontier." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1236196493.

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Sikes, Graydon R. "Henry Farnys paintings of American Indians, 1894-1916 images of conflict between indians and whites evolve into symbolic representations of the demise of the western frontier /." Cincinnati, Ohio : University of Cincinnati, 2009. http://www.ohiolink.edu/etd/view.cgi?acc_num=ucin1236196493.

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Thesis (M.A.)--University of Cincinnati, 2009.
Advisors: Theresa Leininger-Miller PhD (Committee Chair), Susan Meyn PhD (Committee Member), Diane Mankin PhD (Committee Member). Title from electronic thesis title page (viewed May 1, 2009). Includes abstract. Keywords: Henry Farny; painting; western; american; artist. Includes bibliographical references.
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Books on the topic "Frontier conflict"

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Presbyterian conflict and resolution on the Missouri frontier. Lewiston, N.Y., USA: E. Mellen Press, 1987.

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Meyer, Karen. Conflict at Chillicothe: Settlers of the Ohio frontier. Glendale, Ariz: Sable Creek Press, 2010.

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Frontier memory: Cultural conflict & exchange in the romancero fronterizo. London: Modern Humanities Research Association, 2013.

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W, Guice John D., ed. Frontiers in conflict: The Old Southwest, 1795-1830. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1989.

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W, Guice John D., ed. The Old Southwest, 1795-1830: Frontiers in conflict. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1996.

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Moore, William Haas. Chiefs, agents & soldiers: Conflict on the Navajo frontier, 1868-1882. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1994.

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Imperial conflict: A novel. Biddeford, ME: Artenay Press, 2006.

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Schwartz, James. Conflict on the Michigan frontier: Yankee and borderland cultures, 1815-1840. DeKalb, IL: Northern Illinois University Press, 2009.

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The Christian-Muslim frontier: A zone of contact, conflict, or cooperation. New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2004.

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Endalew, Tsega. Inter-ethnic relations on a frontier: Mätakkäl (Ethiopia), 1898-1991. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Frontier conflict"

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Richardson, Rupert N., Cary D. Wintz, Angela Boswell, Adrian Anderson, and Ernest Wallace. "Cultural Conflict on the Frontier." In Texas, 259–88. 11th ed. 11th edition. | New York, NY : Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, 2021. | “First published 2010, 2005, 2001, 1997, 1993 by Pearson Education, Inc. Published by 2016 by Routledge.”: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003106012-13.

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Demirdirek, Hülya. "In the Minority in Moldova: (Dis)Empowerment through Territorial Conflict." In Europe’s Last Frontier?, 115–31. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-10170-9_7.

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Billon, Philippe Le, and Angela Carter. "Securing Alberta’s Tar Sands: Resistance and Criminalization on a New Energy Frontier." In Natural Resources and Social Conflict, 170–92. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137002464_9.

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Daviss, Betty-Anne. "Are Top Down or Grassroots’ Solutions Better in Conflict Areas?" In Birthing Models on the Human Rights Frontier, 285–312. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003088783-15.

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Adeagbo, Oluwafemi. "Social Support, Coping Strategies and Conflict Management." In The Dynamics and Complexities of Interracial Gay Families in South Africa: A New Frontier, 53–70. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-03922-6_4.

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Mishra, Pratik, and Sumit Vij. "Changing Agriculture and Climate Variability in Peri-Urban Gurugram, India." In Water Security, Conflict and Cooperation in Peri-Urban South Asia, 105–21. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79035-6_6.

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AbstractFarmers across India are protesting the apathy of the state towards the agricultural sector, which is facing a triple crisis – economic, ecological and existential. This chapter attempts to locate the changing dynamics of agriculture at a frontier where a geographically specific articulation of this crisis comes to the fore: in Budhera, a peri-urban village bordering Gurugram city in the Indian state of Haryana. The village is still largely agrarian but undergoing rapid changes under the influence of (peri-)urbanization. Our ethnographic research investigates the juxtaposition of these urbanization processes with the more general impacts of climate variability on peri-urban agriculture. Although climate variability plays out at a larger scale than the urbanization processes, the conditions for peri-urban agriculture derive from an intersection of both. The results show how dimensions of agrarian livelihoods such as cropping choices, irrigation cycles, sharecropping arrangements, declining common property resources and land use changes to non-agricultural uses are influenced by (peri-)urbanization processes. We conclude that changes in land and water use in Budhera reshape agricultural practices and can cascade upon climate variability impacts in making agriculture more precarious for peri-urban farmers.
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Hampson, Jamie G. "Conflict on the Frontier: San Rock Art, Spirituality, and Historical Narrative in the Free State Province, South Africa." In Rock Art and Sacred Landscapes, 103–15. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-8406-6_7.

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Yildiz, Sara Nur. "Reconceptualizing the Seljuk-Cilician Frontier: Armenians, Latins, and Turks in Conflict and Alliance during the Early Thirteenth Century." In Studies in the Early Middle Ages, 91–120. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.sem-eb.3.3728.

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Luard, Evan. "Frontiers." In Conflict and Peace in the Modern International System, 68–91. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19305-9_3.

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Mthimkhulu, Oscar, and Adrian Nel. "The partially transformed frontier." In Conservation, Land Conflicts, and Sustainable Tourism in Southern Africa, 181–96. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003188902-15.

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Conference papers on the topic "Frontier conflict"

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González Giraldo, Luis Fernando. "FRONTERAS AGRÍCOLAS, MERCADO Y CONFLICTO Persistencia de la violencia en la Cuenca del Guaviare." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Bogotá: Universidad Piloto de Colombia, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.10243.

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From the critical analysis of the factors and actors of the violence and the geographical, historical, social and economic antecedents of the occupation of the territory, it is intended to address the question of why the conflict persists in the Guaviare river watershed, confluence of the departments del Meta, Guaviare and Vichada, one of the regions most characterized by this phenomenon in Colombia, expressed in the substitution of violent actors, the increase in illicit crops, illegal mining and environmental damage. This, four years after signing the 2016 peace agreement and despite the fact that it established for some of these areas, especially affected by violence, specific figures of attention (Zones most affected by the conflict (ZOMAC), Development programs with territorial approach (PDET) with community participation, institutional presence and investment, to solve the causes of the conflict that had had the greatest impact there and facilitate comprehensive social development. Finally, recognizing the total incidence of the model and the legal and illegal economic actors, the expansion of the agricultural frontier and the interrelation with strategic corridors in regional dynamics, a different treatment of the conflict is proposed, focusing attention on controlling these factors; as much or more than the armed actors. Keywords Conflict, territorial control, economic model Thematic block: analysis and territorial project Desde el análisis crítico de los factores y actores de la violencia y los antecedentes geográficos, históricos, sociales y económicos de la ocupación del territorio, se pretende abordar la cuestión del porqué persiste el conflicto en la cuenca del río Guaviare, confluencia de los departamentos del Meta, Guaviare y Vichada, una de las regiones más caracterizadas por ese fenómeno en Colombia, expresado en la sustitución de los actores violentos, el incremento de los cultivos ilícitos, la minería ilegal y la afectación ambiental. Esto, cuatro años después de suscribirse el acuerdo de paz del 2016 y pese a que este estableció para algunas de estas zonas, especialmente afectadas por la violencia, figuras específicas de atención (Zonas más afectadas por el conflicto (ZOMAC) y programas de Desarrollo con enfoque territorial (PDET) con participación comunitaria, presencia institucional e inversión, para solventar las causas del conflicto que allí había tenido mayor impacto y facilitar un desarrollo social integral. Finalmente, reconociendo la incidencia total del modelo y los actores económicos legales e ilegales , la ampliación de la frontera agrícola y la interrelación con los corredores estratégicos en las dinámicas regionales, se plantea un tratamiento diferente al conflicto, enfocando la atención al control de esos factores; tanto o más que a los actores armados. Palabras clave Conflicto, control territorial, modelo económico Bloque temático: análisis y proyecto territorial
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Zandvliet, Luc. "Asset-Level Social Performance in Conflict Areas & Frontier Markets; Doable or Doomsday Scenario?" In SPE Asia Pacific Health, Safety, Security, Environment and Social Responsibility Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/185211-ms.

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Yang, Mingguang, Liyuan Cai, and Guoming Song. "Constraint Satisfaction Timetabling Research Based on Course-Period-Template Selection and Conflict-Vector Detection." In 2010 Fifth International Conference on Frontier of Computer Science and Technology (FCST). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fcst.2010.23.

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Narváez Tijerina, Adolfo Benito. "Imaginarios urbanos de una ciudad transfronteriza y su expresión en internet." In International Conference Virtual City and Territory. Rio de Janeiro: Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/ctv.7857.

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El trabajo trata sobre las divergencias y convergencias entre las imágenes de las arquitecturas y las ciudades mexicanas y estadounidenses de la ciudad red Reynosa- McAllen- Matamoros- Brownsville, en el contexto del desarrollo de los imaginarios del conflicto, fruto del contacto forzoso de los estadounidenses y los mexicanos. Se desarrolla la idea de que las grandes urbanizaciones que ahora ocupan espacios transfronterizos y sus arquitecturas a nivel de las calles, serán en el futuro los escenarios de conflictos por la reivindicación de antiguos agravios, mismos que se desarrollan en los imaginarios y se expresan en formas urbanas específicas. Se estudia una genealogía de arquitecturas y diseños urbanos de ambos lados de la frontera a través de su expresión en internet, para establecer los elementos que representan un choque de concepciones territoriales que hace notablemente divergentes ambos lados de la frontera México- estadounidense. This article is about the asymmetries between the images of the architectures and of the Mexican’s and USA’s cities of the net-city Reynosa-McAllen-Matamoros-Brownsville, in the context of the development of the imaginaries of conflict, fruit of the forced contact of the Americans and the Mexicans. It is developed the idea that the large urbanization that now occupies trans-frontiers spaces and its architectures at the level of streets, will be the future scenario of conflict for the claim of old offenses, these imaginaries are expressed in specific urban forms. We study a genealogy of architecture and urban design from both sides of the border through its expression on the Internet, to establish the elements that represent a clash of ideas that makes remarkably divergent territorial both sides of the US-Mexico border.
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Pérez Monge, Luis Alonso. "SISTEMAS INFRAESTRUCTURALES COMO ARTICULADORES TRANSFRONTERIZOS: Planteamientos urbano-económicos para la intervención de la frontera entre Nicaragua y Costa Rica." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Bogotá: Universidad Piloto de Colombia, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.10057.

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The accelerated global process of hyperglobalization has affected the dynamics of geopolitical borders, overcoming historical border conflicts through the articulating capacity of infrastructures. The global commercial transport system seeks to optimize and propose new routes to increase cargo capacity, focusing again on Central America, where the border between Nicaragua and Costa Rica meets the ideal geographical and territorial conditions to develop a new commercial crossing, because the new Panama Canal cannot meet the growth in demand due to capacity and size. This border recovers a geostrategic interest, projecting itself as the ideal sector to develop a transoceanic connection, as in the 19th century, a situation that led to border conflicts. Today this is manifested as a new opportunity to intervene the territory from the connectivity networks, under a new urban concept, achieving a transnational cohesion from the infrastructural systems. Keywords: border, connectivity, territory, infrastructural El acelerado proceso de hiperglobalización ha afectado las dinámicas de las fronterizas geopolíticas, superando conflictos limítrofes históricos por medio de la articulación de las infraestructuras. El sistema mundial de transporte comercial busca optimizar y proponer nuevas rutas para aumentar la capacidad de carga, fijándose nuevamente en Centroamérica, donde la frontera entre Nicaragua y Costa Rica reúne las condiciones geográficas y territoriales ideales para desarrollar un nuevo paso comercial. Esta frontera recobra un interés geoestratégico, proyectándose como el sector ideal para desarrollar una conexión transoceánica, como en el siglo XIX, situación que derivó en conflictos fronterizos. Hoy esto se manifiesta como una nueva oportunidad para intervenir el territorio desde las redes de conectividad, bajo un nuevo concepto urbano, logrando una cohesión transnacional desde los sistemas infraestructurales. Palabras clave: frontera, conectividad, territorio, infraestructural
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Bhatti, M. Ilyas. "Water—The Next Frontier for International Conflicts." In World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2018. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784481394.019.

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de Langen, Pepijn J., and Ben Juurlink. "Reducing traffic generated by conflict misses in caches." In the first conference on computing frontiers. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/977091.977123.

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Luechtefeld, R. A., and S. E. Watkins. "Special session - Team training to promote constructive (not destructive) conflict." In 35th Annual Frontiers in Education. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fie.2005.1612259.

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Mirza, Ghulam Ali. "Null Value Conflict: Formal Definition and Resolution." In 2015 13th International Conference on Frontiers of Information Technology (FIT). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fit.2015.32.

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Schowengerdt, Brian T. "True 3D displays: Multi-focal retinal scanned-light displays for overcoming the accommodation/vergence conflict." In Frontiers in Optics. Washington, D.C.: OSA, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/fio.2004.ftha2.

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Reports on the topic "Frontier conflict"

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Alston, Lee, Edwyna Harris, and Bernardo Mueller. De Facto and De Jure Property Rights: Land Settlement and Land Conflict on the Australian, Brazilian and U.S. Frontiers. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, September 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w15264.

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Sauer, Sérgio, and Lídia Cabral. Martyrdom of the Cerrado: An Agri-Food Territory in Need of Justice. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2022.010.

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The Cerrado is a natural biome occupying 25 per cent of Brazil’s surface. Compared to the Amazon, it is relatively unknown to international audiences, yet it is currently the world’s largest agricultural frontier. Intensive soybean and beef production are driving deforestation, water depletion, habitat loss, and land grabbing. Emphasising the scale of land-based inequality and conflicts, this briefing exposes the Cerrado as a territory of martyrdom, contrasting the ‘miracle’ portrayed by the dominant agri-food regime. Resistance struggles within the region are outlined and recommendations looking to challenge the success narrative of agribusiness and to move towards territorial justice are presented.
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Hunter, Janine, Lorraine van Blerk, Thomas d'Aquin Rubambura, Cold Musiwa Mubigalo, Luc Mufano, Wayne Shand, Anabelle, et al. Vie de rue dans la ville à la frontière: Des jeunes de la rue racontent leurs vies quotidiennes à Bukavu, RDC. StreetInvest, August 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.20933/100001259.

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Bukavu, une ville située sur les rives du lac Kivu, à l'est de la République démocratique du Congo (RDC), abrite plus d'un million de personnes, dont de nombreuses personnes déplacées par la pauvreté et les conséquences des conflits armés qui continuent d'affecter l'est du Congo. Plus de 10 000 enfants et jeunes de la rue vivent ici dans des situations de rue. 19 jeunes de la rue ont aidé à créer cette carte narrative en enregistrant toutes les données visuelles et en partageant leurs histoires sur leur vie quotidienne. La carte narrative comprend 9 sections et 2 galeries montrant la vie quotidienne des enfants et des jeunes des rues à Bukavu et le travail de PEDER, partenaire de la société civile Grandir dans la rue, pour les aider. Les chapitres comprennent des détails sur la façon dont les enfants et les jeunes des rues collectent les plastiques sur les rives du lac Kivu pour les vendre, ils cuisinent et partagent de la nourriture ensemble, ou achètent dans des restaurants ou des étals. Les jeunes femmes gagnent leur vie dans le travail du sexe et s'occupent de leurs enfants et les jeunes hommes se détendent, créent des liens et espèrent gagner de l'argent supplémentaire en jouant et en pariant. La langue originale enregistrée dans les vidéos est le swahili, elle a été traduite en anglais et en français pour les deux versions de la carte. Tout le matériel visuel et contextuel a été créé par des jeunes de la rue vivant dans les rues de Bukavu, à savoir : Annabelle, Armel, Baba, Baridi, Bikulo, Cornelia, Diomo, Edouard, Francis, Georges, Ginette, Jasmine, Nicaise, Noah, Remi, Royal, Yvette and Zachary.
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