Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2020 (2) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
- Ausgabe (Heft) zu einer Zeitschrift (2) (entfernen)
Sprache
- Englisch (2) (entfernen)
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (2) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Anthropocene (1)
- Anthropozän (1)
- Deutschland (1)
- Frankreich (1)
- Gesellschaft (1)
- Greater Region SaarLorLux (1)
- Grenzarbeitnehmer (1)
- Grenzgebiet (1)
- Grenzüberschreitung (1)
- Luxemburg (1)
The object of the current Thematic Issue is not to focus on the individuals (the cross-border commuters) but on the organization of the cross-border labor markets. We move from a micro perspective to a macro perspective in order to underline the diversity of the cross-border labor markets (at the French borders, for example) and shed light on the many aspects that impact cross-border supply or demand. Trying to understand the whole system that goes beyond the cross-border flows, the question we address in this thematic issue is about the organization of the labor markets: is the system organized in a cross-border way? Or do the borders still prevent a genuinely integrated cross-border labor market?
B/ordering the Anthropocene: Inter- and Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Nature-Culture Relations
(2020)
In and with this thematic issue we would like to invite you to engage in productive boundary work and to critically examine the relationship between nature and culture in the Anthropocene. A few years ago, the term Anthropocene was proposed by Paul Crutzen as a term for the current geological epoch, in which humankind (the ‘anthropos’) is seen as the central driving force for global changes in ecological systems. This epoch is characterized by the blurring of boundaries between society and nature, science and politics, as well as by the increased drawing of boundaries between social groups, lifestyles, and the Global North and Global South. With this issue, we would like to give an impetus to explore boundary phenomena in the relationship between nature and society, which up to now have not been the focus of Border Studies. The challenges and problems of the Anthropocene require cross-border thinking and research that stimulates a new reflexivity and commitment, to which the multidisciplinary field of Border Studies can contribute.