ASU selected as host for the Association for Borderlands Studies


A map of Mexico.
|

As the conversations surrounding borderlands continue to evolve, so too does Arizona State University's role as a thought leader in the global discourse on borderland studies.

ASU, in association with the School of Transborder StudiesThe School of Transborder Studies is an academic unit in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences., has been selected as the host institution for the Association for Borderland Studies (ABS).

The association is the leading global, scholarly association in the field of borderland studies, with more than 1700 memberships in 55 countries in the Americas, Europe, Asia and Africa. Members include individual scholars, international organizations, and professionals from various universities, who are dedicated to the systematic study and exchange of ideas related to borderlands and frontier areas.

As the host institution, ASU will assume ABS's administrative duties to both support and amplify the association's goals.

The importance of ASU’s commitment to borderland studies in Arizona should come as no surprise, said Francisco Lara-Valencia, associate professor in the School of Transborder Studies and ABS president-elect.

“If you consider that the major trading partner of Arizona is Mexico, and that one in three Arizonans have some connection with Mexico, it is easy to fathom the importance of border studies for ASU,” Lara-Valencia said.

But behind the veil of Arizona and Mexico’s mutual economic partnership, lies a parallel, national conversation about border security and immigration, Lara-Valencia added: "One portraying it as a resource, and the other one as a hazard.” 

Being in Arizona provides ABS and ASU with the unique opportunity to be engaged in the global conversation about borders and transborder social, cultural, economic, political, and environmental realities. 

“In many ways, Arizona is ground zero for border studies,” said Lara-Valencia. “Scholars and policy-makers in other border regions of the world are looking at Arizona for understanding and experience that can be useful in explaining their own border realities.”

ABS hosts an annual conference with its members and publishes a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal. More information about the Association for Borderland Studies can be found at absborderlands.org.

Top photo: "Mexico, 1857," School of Transborder Studies Gallery. Photo by Andy DeLisle (2014)

More Local, national and global affairs

 

A globe sits on a desk next to foreign language books.

5 ASU students receive Boren Awards for critical foreign language study

The Lorraine W. Frank Office of National Scholarships Advisement (ONSA) has announced that five Arizona State University students have received Boren Awards for immersive study of foreign languages…

City hall police headquarters sign on a brick building

New joint faculty member excited about finding interdisciplinary solutions

Like about 98% of college football players, James Wright realized as he wrapped up his career playing wide receiver for the University of Southern California that he wasn’t destined to play…

People seated at four long tables that form a rectangle for a dinner, with one person standing and talking in the middle

Bringing vitality to city centers

Universities, cities and the private sector can jointly tackle workforce development and downtown economic development for the benefit of communities and the people who live in them — all while…