In Aotearoa/New Zealand borders closed in March 2020 to protect citizens from COVID-19, a closure which was to remain in effect for over two years. Rather than a disruptor, however, this closure can be interpreted as a node in a much longer process of settler-colonial nation building and its particular global dynamic.
In this talk, Dr Fiona McCormack draws on her long-term ethnographic research with Indigenous Māori as well as a collaborative 18-month project on ‘borders’ to unpack the troubled relationship between state bordering and Indigenous sovereignty, and examine how, in moments when concepts of settler safety are threatened, border violence, far-right rhetoric and white supremacy visibly emerge.
See her paper Settler colonial bordering and post-pandemic futures: disrupting the nation state in Aotearoa/New Zealand
The talk will be followed by comments by Professor Edvard Hviding (UiB).
The event is chaired by Post Doctoral Researcher Hang Zhou (CMI).
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