Hardback : $75.31
Harsha Walia is the award-winning author of Undoing Border Imperialism (2013). Trained in the law, she is a community organizer and campaigner in migrant justice, anti-capitalist, feminist, and anti-imperialist movements, including No One Is Illegal and Women's Memorial March Committee.
Foreword by Robin D. G. Kelley
Introduction
Part 1: Displacement Crisis Not Border Crisis
Chapter 1: Historic Entanglements of US Border Formation
Chapter 2: US Wars Abroad, Wars at Home
Chapter 3: Dispossession, Deprivation, Displacement: Reframing the Migration Crisis
Part 2: “Illegals” and “Undesirables”: The Criminalization of Migration
Chapter 4: Bordering Regimes
Chapter 5: Australia and the Pacific Solution
Chapter 6: Fortress Europe
Part 3: Capitalist Globalization and Insourcing of Migrant Labor
Chapter 7: Model of Temporary Labor Migration
Chapter 8: The Kafala System in the Gulf States
Chapter 9: Temporary Foreign Worker Program in Canada
Part 4: Making Race, Mobilizing Racist Nationalisms
Chapter 10: Mapping the Global Far Right and the Crisis of Statelessness
Chapter 11: Refusing Reactionary Nationalisms
Conclusion
Afterword by Nick Estes
Harsha Walia is the award-winning author of Undoing Border Imperialism (2013). Trained in the law, she is a community organizer and campaigner in migrant justice, anti-capitalist, feminist, and anti-imperialist movements, including No One Is Illegal and Women's Memorial March Committee.
Foreword by Robin D. G. Kelley
Introduction
Part 1: Displacement Crisis Not Border Crisis
Chapter 1: Historic Entanglements of US Border Formation
Chapter 2: US Wars Abroad, Wars at Home
Chapter 3: Dispossession, Deprivation, Displacement: Reframing the Migration Crisis
Part 2: “Illegals” and “Undesirables”: The Criminalization of Migration
Chapter 4: Bordering Regimes
Chapter 5: Australia and the Pacific Solution
Chapter 6: Fortress Europe
Part 3: Capitalist Globalization and Insourcing of Migrant Labor
Chapter 7: Model of Temporary Labor Migration
Chapter 8: The Kafala System in the Gulf States
Chapter 9: Temporary Foreign Worker Program in Canada
Part 4: Making Race, Mobilizing Racist Nationalisms
Chapter 10: Mapping the Global Far Right and the Crisis of Statelessness
Chapter 11: Refusing Reactionary Nationalisms
Conclusion
Afterword by Nick Estes
Foreword by Robin D. G. Kelley
Introduction
Part 1: Displacement Crisis Not Border
Crisis
Chapter 1: Historic Entanglements of US Border
Formation
Chapter 2: US Wars Abroad, Wars at Home
Chapter 3: Dispossession, Deprivation, Displacement: Reframing the
Migration Crisis
Part 2: “Illegals” and “Undesirables”: The Criminalization
of Migration
Chapter 4: Bordering Regimes
Chapter 5: Australia and the Pacific Solution
Chapter 6: Fortress Europe
Part 3: Capitalist Globalization and Insourcing of Migrant
Labor
Chapter 7: Model of Temporary Labor Migration
Chapter 8: The Kafala System in the Gulf States
Chapter 9: Temporary Foreign Worker Program in Canada
Part 4: Making Race, Mobilizing Racist
Nationalisms
Chapter 10: Mapping the Global Far Right
and the Crisis of Statelessness
Chapter 11: Refusing Reactionary Nationalisms
Conclusion
Afterword by Nick Estes
Harsha Walia is the award-winning author of Undoing Border Imperialism (2013). Trained in the law, she is a community organizer and campaigner in migrant justice, anti-capitalist, feminist, and anti-imperialist movements, including No One Is Illegal and Women's Memorial March Committee.
“Harsha Walia doesn’t peddle easy solutions or liberal bromides.
She has a knack for going to the root of our planetary crises and
explaining how we arrived here, and what to do about it. Those of
us who have been reading and following her for years expect nothing
less. She is not only one of North America’s most brilliant
thinkers, she is also an organizer who has devoted her life to
fighting racial capitalism, colonialism, militarism, xenophobia,
patriarchy, and defending the rights of migrants, Indigenous
people, women, and the unhoused. This book is a shock to the
system.” —Robin D. G. Kelley, from the Foreword
“In Walia’s expert hands, the planet’s sprawling borderlands are
exposed as capitalism’s gaping wounds, filled with escalating
terror and torment as whiteness ferociously seeks to defend its
imagined boundaries. This is a book of unsparing truth and dazzling
ambition, providing readers with desperately needed intellectual
ammunition to confront the inherent violence of borders. An
enormous contribution to our movements.” —Naomi Klein, author
of This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate
“I was haunted and agitated by this book which is part expose and
part clarion call for radical action. Harsha Walia offers an
unsparing analysis of the violences of forced migration, borders,
imperialism and capitalism. The case studies presented in this book
weave a quilt that provides us with needed knowledge to confront
current problems that demand an organized collective response. The
ideas in this book will linger long after you’ve put it down.”
—Mariame Kaba, founder and director of Project NIA
“This indispensable, deeply researched, and beautifully written
book is the first and most in-depth global analysis of borders and
immigration, wars and displacement, imperialism and western white
nationalism. Always with her ear to the ground and paying close
attention to the people whose lives are wrecked or lost, Walia
demands action and offers real solutions.” —Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz,
author of An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United
States.
“Harsha Walia’s deeply thoughtful and well-written book makes
creative connections that other writers have preferred to ignore.
It offers a lucid, insightful survey of the most difficult
political issues that we face.” —Paul Gilroy, author of The
Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness
“In this exceptional book, Harsha Walia takes us on a stunning and
terrifying tour of the Great Wall of Capitalism, the border killing
zone where viral fascism feeds on the bodies of the poor and
persecuted. Hell is already here.” —Mike Davis, co-author
of Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties
“Border and Rule provides a kaleidoscopic exposé, painstaking
analysis, and damning indictment of the border regimes that are
generating and fueling anti-migrant brutality and state violence on
an international scale. Harsha Walia is relentless in drilling
into, detailing, and cataloguing the array of processes, players,
policies, and ideologies that uphold systems of border
imperialism—while simultaneously mapping-out for us an
understanding of how we can disrupt and dismantle them.” —Justin
Akers Chacón, co-author of No One Is Illegal: Fighting
Racism and State Violence on the U.S.-Mexico Border
“Building on the thesis of her seminal book Undoing Border
Imperialism, Harsha Walia's incisive voice in Border and
Rule -- equally rigorously theoretical and lovingly
community-minded -- refuses to allow our struggles and organizing
to exist in vacuums. From anti-black police murders and carcerality
to the fortressing of borders across indigenous lands to the
fabricated migrant crises to the exploitations of their labor, and
to the racial nationalisms and legal structures that drive these
violences, Walia's latest book provides an international
cartography of the crisis of global neoliberalism. It is a stunning
and horrific elucidation of Ayesha Siddiqi's line that 'Every
border implies the violence of its maintenance.' But the narrative
Walia deftly weaves is the polar opposite of alarmist political
nihilism: it is a clarion call for our solidarities to always
transcend the physical and ideological boundaries drawn by empire.
This is not simply a book about violence, it is also a book about
the potential for care and for freedom.” —Zoé Samudzi, co-author
of As Black As Resistance: Finding the Conditions for
Liberation
“Timely and topical, Border and Rule will be of interest
to scholars, activists, and general readers. Walia connects
variants of ethnonationalism across borders and illustrates how a
world order predicated on aggression and displacement harms the
most vulnerable among us, a category that includes a significant
portion of the global population. Her analysis presents clear and
compelling evidence that our current trajectory is unsustainable
and offers cogent solutions trained on justice for the victims of
endless war and colonial accumulation.” —Steven Salaita,
author of Inter/Nationalism: Decolonizing Native America and
Palestine
“Harsha Walia's Border and Rule forwards a clear and
incisive analysis of the multiple crises facing migrants today
amidst the rise of racist nationalisms globally. Her work highlighs
the entanglements between global capitalism, imperialism, and past
and present dynamics of Indigenous genocide and anti-Black
governance that are at the heart of the border regime. Border
and Rule is a must-read, sure to become a classic, for those
of us concerned with building a world premised on freedom of
movement, against and beyond the logics of the nation-state.”
—Robyn Maynard, author of Policing Black Lives: State
violence in Canada from slavery to the present
“Read Harsha Walia and your understanding of the world will shift.
This book is a comprehensive demolition of the borders that divide
us and a deft takedown of the myth of the nation. Through a range
of case-studies, Walia reveals overarching patterns of exclusion
and exploitation, criss-crossing the globe to make a brave, deeply
learned, and utterly convincing call for radical solidarity. With
cries of "build a wall" ringing out and ethno-nationalism gaining
steam, Walia’s critical intervention couldn’t be better timed.”
—Astra Taylor, author of Democracy May Not Exist, but We'll
Miss It When It's Gone
“Confused about how we got to this point? Harsha Walia explains
clearly and concisely the multiple forces causing global poverty
and displacement--and the resistance and organizing around the
world. Walia provides a historical analysis of policies that have
cut down people’s well-being and driven poverty, violence, terror
and mass migration, and highlights the myriad forms of resistance
and organizing that are all-too-often invisiblized. An excellent
explanation of borders, migration and the exploitative systems that
produce both.” —Victoria Law, author of Resistance Behind
Bars: The Struggles of Incarcerated Women
“Harsha Walia's decades of visionary leadership in border abolition
and migrant justice work, along with her relentless intellectual
rigor, is apparent in this immensely important book, arriving right
when we need it most. As governments lock down borders,
mobilizations against policing reach new peaks, economic crisis
worsens, and climate change accelerates, we desperately need this
book if we hope to build a nuanced analysis of what we are facing
and what kinds of transformation are necessary. Walia deftly
exposes the inadequacy of liberal responses to the current crises,
paving the way for a deeper understanding of the conditions we are
facing and meaningful avenues for resistance. Walia's deeply
researched, crystal clear text creates a robust toolbox for
comprehending the current crises and assessing resistance
strategies. This book is invaluable right now, a must-read for
anyone working to dismantle prisons and borders, end poverty and
war.” —Dean Spade, author of Mutual Aid: Building Solidarity
During this Crisis (and the Next)
“As communities and social movements scramble to respond to the
threat of a globalised far-right against the apocalyptic backdrop
of a global pandemic and impending ecological disaster, Harsha
Walia's Border and Rule reminds us of how we got here.
With clinical precision, Walia unravels the genealogies and
histories of border militarization, incarceration and imperialism,
laying bare the webs of domination and exploitation that threaten
the poor and vulnerable everywhere, from those incarcerated in
Australia’s offshore immigration camps to the victims of drone
warfare in Yemen. As we struggle with the cruel symptoms of a
global disease - incarceration, exploitation, occupation,
colonialism, environmental collapse - Walia picks this web apart,
exposing the ways in which these crises interlock and overlap. It
is a stark but necessary blueprint to understand. This book is also
full of hope. It bears witness to the struggles of those who have
survived and continue to resist in spite of merciless repression -
the Indigenous, the enslaved, the exploited, the dispossessed and
the undocumented. It is an urgent and revolutionary call to action
that invites us to revisit the problem so that we may dream and
fight harder for the world we want.” —Aamer Rahman, comedian
“We know that borders are violence. We know that violence numbs our
collective imagination. We know that imagination is a muscle that
must be exercised daily to prevent atrophy. This book is the
workout. Border and Rule works us. With rigor, precision,
and care, Harsha Walia pushes us beyond false solutions, rainbow
imperialisms, and exclusionary projections. What a privilege to
think with her, to build movement muscle for a world free of
borders.” —Shailja Patel, author of Migritude
“Every once in a while there comes a book that makes you never see
the world the same way again. Harsha Walia’s Border and
Rule is such a book. Incisive and rigorously researched, Walia
lays bare the border apparatus like no other: its bloody history
based on colonial dispossession, Indigenous genocides, anti-Black
enslavement, and its contemporary function of maintaining—with
militarized enforcement of divisions—a racialized global system of
subjugation and exploitation rife with criminal inequalities and
ecological catastrophes. Border and Rule is the most
important reframing of borders and their enforcement apparatus that
I have ever read. It demonstrates that the border is not a passive
wall but an expansive omnipresent regime, and that there is no
"border crisis" but a displacement crisis. I will be turning to its
pages again and again, not only for its analysis but also for its
inspiration. Indeed, Walia strips borders of their pretense and
justifications in such a powerful way, that after finishing the
book it feels like we can tear down the walls, and all they
represent, with our bare hands.” —Todd Miller, author
of Empire of Borders: The Expansion of the U.S. Border Around
the World
“Walia’s intervention is to demonstrate, systematically and across
geographies, that there is no acceptable legitimation for border
rule, unless your interest is in upholding global capital as the
sovereign force determining life and livability on the planet. To
show how border regimes function is to reveal that there is no good
argument for them.” —Natasha Lennard, Bookforum
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |