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dc.contributor.authorSilva, Regina Coeli Machado ept_BR
dc.contributor.authorDorfman, Adrianapt_BR
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-27T04:33:47Zpt_BR
dc.date.issued2020pt_BR
dc.identifier.issn2562-9913pt_BR
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10183/220240pt_BR
dc.description.abstractLocal level effects of closing borders between Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil in order to confront COVID-19 disarticulated modes of existence of border dwellers, generating local protests for reopening, creating “sanitary refugees”, deepening the trends of biotechnological controls and sophisticating smuggling. Data for this essay was obtained from local online newspapers and analyzed with help of anthropological and geographical experiences at the border, concentrating on the description of border life and on its changes due to the sudden closure. The essay shows that the complex control structures at these borders gained a centrality whose effects were, besides stifling the pandemic, dismantling and rearticulating border practices, evidently in favor of more control. A disregard of cross-border integration, circulation and communication demonstrates the underlying reification of borders between these three national states.en
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfpt_BR
dc.language.isoengpt_BR
dc.relation.ispartofBorders in Globalization Review. Vancouver Island, Canada. Vol. 2, no. 1 (2020), p. 94-99pt_BR
dc.rightsOpen Accessen
dc.subjectSanitary refugeesen
dc.subjectControle sanitariopt_BR
dc.subjectGestão de fronteiraspt_BR
dc.subjectBiotechnological controlsen
dc.titleBorder Control (Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina) and Local Inventiveness in Times of COVID-19pt_BR
dc.typeArtigo de periódicopt_BR
dc.identifier.nrb001122426pt_BR
dc.type.originEstrangeiropt_BR


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