Assembling the Antipodes: migration, finance and territoriality across Australia and New Zealand

被引:0
作者
Scott, Michael [1 ]
机构
[1] Flinders Univ S Australia, Sociol Program, Adelaide, SA, Australia
关键词
Territoriality; assemblage; Australia; New Zealand; migration; finance; TRANS-TASMAN MIGRATION; NEOLIBERALISM; POWER;
D O I
10.1080/21622671.2017.1279982
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Assembling the Antipodes: migration, finance and territoriality across Australia and New Zealand. Territory, Politics, Governance. Australia and New Zealand's historically close cultural and economic ties have deepened since the neoliberal reforms of the 1980s. This paper develops an exploratory account of an emerging form of Antipodean territoriality that contributes another exemplar to interpretations of how public authority and private interests coalesce in the governance of space. Drawing on publicly available empirical material on contemporary migration and financial flows across the Tasman Sea and concepts from assemblage thinking, it is argued that these flows are stabilized through different institutional adjustments and enmeshments with cultural norms in both territories. Australian banks now supply financial capital to undergird a property (real estate) boom in New Zealand, the profits from which are returned to Australia. Concurrently, there has been mass migration of New Zealand citizens to Australia facilitated by the Special Category Visa, who are in turn replaced by mass migration into New Zealand. This research reveals how Australian-located power and interests exert a, albeit fragile and mutable, spatial reach into New Zealand territorial space to regulate, at a distance, migration into Australia while simultaneously legitimating the logics of financial extraction.
引用
收藏
页码:240 / 258
页数:19
相关论文
共 81 条
[1]   Sovereignty regimes: Territoriality and state authority in contemporary world politics [J].
Agnew, J .
ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS, 2005, 95 (02) :437-461
[2]   The territorial trap: the geographical assumptions of international relations theory [J].
Agnew, John .
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY, 1994, 1 (01) :53-80
[3]   Unbundled territoriality and regional politics [J].
Agnew, John .
TERRITORY POLITICS GOVERNANCE, 2015, 3 (02) :119-123
[4]  
Agnew John., 2009, Globalization and Sovereignty
[5]   Powerful assemblages? [J].
Allen, John .
AREA, 2011, 43 (02) :154-157
[6]   Assemblages of State Power: Topological Shifts in the Organization of Government and Politics [J].
Allen, John ;
Cochrane, Allan .
ANTIPODE, 2010, 42 (05) :1071-1089
[7]   Assemblage and geography [J].
Anderson, Ben ;
McFarlane, Colin .
AREA, 2011, 43 (02) :124-127
[8]  
Anderson Ben., 2012, DIALOGUES HUM GEOGR, V2, P171, DOI DOI 10.1177/2043820612449261
[9]  
Andre J., 2011, EC IMBALANCES NZ STR
[10]  
[Anonymous], 2013, MAKING NZ POP RENAIS