A Story from the Schengen Periphery
Blog Editor’s Note
By Barbara Gornik, Science and Research Centre Koper
The image of a razor-wire fence generally evokes connotations associated with oppression, incarceration, loss of freedom, and political violence. Ironically, several border areas in the European Union – a union that has always had a tendency to present itself as a political community where human rights are fully respected – are enclosed by razor-wire fences, with the aim of preventing people’s movement. How is it possible that on the threshold of the 21st century, when we live in the so-called “Age of the Rights”, such political actions are maintained? I claim it is because of the profound transformation of the meaning of the razor-wire fence that empties its violent character and endows it with new implications, including those related to humanitarianism, human rights, and the rule of law. The Slovenian story of the razor- wire fence serves as an example to demonstrate how this transformation of meaning, evident in the semantic contingency of a razor-wire fence, manifests at the level of political practice.
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