《GRAY GOVERNANCE AT BORDER CHECKPOINTS: Regulating Shadow Trade at the Sino-Kazakh Border》
打印
- 作者
- Tak-Wing Ngo & Eva P.W. Hung
- 来源
- INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH,Vol.48,Issue3,P.488-505
- 语言
- 英文
- 关键字
- 作者单位
- 摘要
- Shadow trading is a common activity along state borders. Its omnipresence is puzzling because border checkpoints are highly regulated spaces that are heavily gated and securitized. Most studies attribute such a paradox to ineffective border control and corruption. However, this line of argument overlooks the peculiar nature of border and checkpoint governance. We explore this phenomenon with a case study of the Sino-Kazakh border where shadow traders negotiate their passage every day. We find that border crossing is a highly organized activity dictated by informal yet specific and meticulous rules that are enforced by various state and non-state actors. Together, they constitute a kind of gray governance that is thoroughly entwined with the formal regime. It is a kind of technology of rule that enables the state to selectively enforce formal and informal rules so as to accommodate the conflicting goals of border control.