Conflict and co-operation on Polish borders: the example of the Polish-German, Polish-Ukrainian and Polish-Russian border regions

Authors

  • Katarzyna Stokłosa University of Southern Denmark Department of Border Region Studies

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15203/ozp.92.vol42iss1

Keywords:

Polish-German border, Polish eastern border, border regime, perceptions of border (Deutsch-Polnische Grenze, Ostgrenze Polens, Grenzregime, Wahrnehmung von Grenzen)

Abstract

Using the example of the Polish border, the article will examine the phenomenon of borders and border regions in connection with neighbourhood relations from the end of the Second World War until 2011. At what point does a border become a border region? How did neighbourhood relations develop in the course of Polish history? How far have the respective neighbours progressed in overcoming prejudice and stereotypes? These questions will be discussed within the context of Poland’s western border with Germany and her eastern borders with Russia and Ukraine.

The article analyses different perceptions of the Polish western and eastern border regions by its inhabitants. How did the perceptions of the border change in the periods of a closed and open border? How did popular narratives of the border and border region develop amidst the contexts of the Cold War and the end of Communism?

 

Author Biography

  • Katarzyna Stokłosa, University of Southern Denmark Department of Border Region Studies

    Katarzyna Stokłosa (1974) is Associate Professor in the Department of Border Region Studies at the University of Sønderborg (Denmark). She finished her PhD at the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder) and her habilitation thesis at the University of Potsdam. She has published widely on European border regions in comparison and on European history.

     

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Published

2013-02-21

Issue

Section

Special issue article

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