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The Quest for No Man's Land

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By Noam Lesham, Durham University, UK, and Alasdair Pinkerton, Royal Holloway University of London, UK.

The Quest For No Man's Land

A migrant camp on the Slovenia-Croatia border, September 2015. Photographer: Elliot Graves, FOXEP

Recent news reports1 of new no man s lands emerging across Europe conjure an image of migrants trapped in places that are considered to be somehow in between .

Typically that means in between hastily erected border fences, such as those that have suddenly appeared on the Hungarian borders with Croatia, Serbia and Austria, or at reinstated border posts between Schengen-area countries.

This re-emergence of no-man s land in the popular vocabulary is just its latest incarnation. In Western cultural memory, no-man s land traditionally invokes the killing fields of the First World War. Disseminated and popularised through journalistic accounts from the Western Front, the no-man s land became known as the ultimate locus of physical and corporeal destruction.

However, in the latter half of the 20th century, no man s lands have been associated with anywhere from ungovernable territories2 and the spatio-legal limbos of the war on terror , to plighted deindustrialised urban boroughs3 in North America.

This growing proliferation prompted us to ask the seemingly simple question that lies at the heart of our paper published by Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers: What is no-man s land?4 The answers to this question seem intuitively obvious, yet bewilderingly broad.

At its core, our article sets out to rethink the significance of no man s lands to the political and social challenges of the present. Revisiting over 1000 of the term s history, we focus attention on the realities of life for individuals and communities who live, work in or travel through these space. Rather than empty sites or dead zones , we argue that no man s lands are living spaces.

While the withdrawal of traditional forms of power often results in material dilapidation and heightened vulnerability of populations, we find that no man s lands often become sites of political activity and cultural creativity.

We recently completed a 6,000 mile journey in search of no-man s lands5 past and present. This took us from the mediaeval Nomansland6 in Herefordshire, through the French villages7 decimated in WWI, the route of the Iron Curtain8 and the Cypriot Buffer Zone. We were hoping to reach Bir Tawil on the Egypt-Sudan border, the last unclaimed territory on earth, but this never transpired9.

As we were crossing Europe, the Schengen Agreement was coming under immense pressure with old borders reinstated almost overnight.

It was then that the media use of no man s land began proliferating. However, the new no-man s lands of Europe may be opening up along the lines of national borders, but also in spaces hundreds of miles10 from Europe s edges . Pedestrian underpasses, train platforms, and even train carriages can and have become, however briefly, sites of restriction, enclosure and abandonment.

Second, these no-man s lands are highly dynamic they migrate, they move, they materialise and de-materialise with startling rapidity in response to shifting political decisions (perhaps especially so when there are differential political decisions across borders), police activity or the presence of NGOs and international humanitarian activity.

Rethinking no-man s lands in the 21st century is a key challenge that will require a more rigorous engagement from historians, geographers and political scientists.

At the same time, and as we are reminded daily, this is also task with concrete policy implications, one with immense social and political stakes.

About the authors: Noam Lesham11 is a lecturer in the Department of Geography at Durham University and Alasdair Pinkerton12 is a Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London. Find out more about the Into no man s land expedition, co-led by Noam and Alasdair, at http://www.intonomansland.org/ 13.

The Quest For No Man's Land Aronson G 2015 Egypt threatened by ungoverned space on Libyan border AL-Monitor14

The Quest For No Man's Land BBC 2015 Migrant crisis: Trapped in no-man s land at the Croatia/Serbia border15

The Quest For No Man's Land Leshem, N. and Pinkerton, A. (2015), Re-inhabiting no-man s land: genealogies, political life and critical agendas.16 Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

doi: 10.1111/tran.12102

The Quest For No Man's Land Raven B 2014 No man s land: Unwanted land piles up in Jackson County M Live Media Group17

The Quest For No Man's Land Iyengar R 2015 Hungary reopens Budapest train station to stranded refugees after two days Time 18

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References

  1. ^ news reports (www.bbc.co.uk)
  2. ^ ungovernable territories (www.al-monitor.com)
  3. ^ plighted deindustrialised urban boroughs (www.mlive.com)
  4. ^ Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers: What is no-man s land? (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  5. ^ journey in search of no-man s lands (www.intonomansland.org)
  6. ^ mediaeval Nomansland (www.intonomansland.org)
  7. ^ French villages (www.intonomansland.org)
  8. ^ Iron Curtain (www.intonomansland.org)
  9. ^ never transpired (www.intonomansland.org)
  10. ^ hundreds of miles (time.com)
  11. ^ Noam Lesham (www.dur.ac.uk)
  12. ^ Alasdair Pinkerton (pure.royalholloway.ac.uk)
  13. ^ http://www.intonomansland.org/ (www.intonomansland.org)
  14. ^ Egypt threatened by ungoverned space on Libyan border (www.al-monitor.com)
  15. ^ Migrant crisis: Trapped in no-man s land at the Croatia/Serbia border (www.bbc.co.uk)
  16. ^ Re-inhabiting no-man s land: genealogies, political life and critical agendas. (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  17. ^ No man s land: Unwanted land piles up in Jackson County (www.mlive.com)
  18. ^ Hungary reopens Budapest train station to stranded refugees after two days (time.com)

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