1. Borna Fuerst-Bjeliš and Walter Leimgruber, Marginalization – the Dark Side of Globalization
Part I Society, Conflicts and Marginality
2. Walter Leimgruber, Civil Society vs. Globalization and Marginalization: Polarized vs.Organic Thinking
3. Kristjan Nemac, Do we Needto Change the System? Think Global and Create a Local Alternative
4. Stanko Pelc, Armed Conflicts asGenerators of Marginalization
Part II Identities and borders
5. TomášHavlíček, RelictBorders as Present Social-Cultural Divides in Czechia: an Example of Religious Landscape
6. Borna Fuerst-Bjeliš, Environmental Response to Marginality: Between the Borderlands and Littoralization in the Eastern Adriatic
7. Borna Fuerst-Bjeliš, Other and/or Marginal: Coexistence of Identities in the Historical Borderlands of Croatia
8. Lisa Millsaps, Thomas B. Larsen, Mary Curtis and Maria Monakhova, Geography Education and the Borderlands: Using a Marginalized Discipline to Teach about the Margins
Part III Poverty and disparities
9. Leizel Williams-Bruinders and Anton de Wit, Living on the Edge: Housing Challenges of the Urban Poor in Port Elizabeth, South Africa
10. Sahab Deen, Caste Rigidity and Socio-Economic Condition of Dalits in India
11. Alenka Janko Spreizer, Roma, Marginalization, Globalization and Conflicts over Water: the Case of Slovenia
12. Sabine Girard, Pierre-Antoine Landel and Corentin Thermes, The Circulation of Knowledge at the Time of the Agroecological Transition, the Case of the Drôme Valley (France)
Part IV Conclusion
13. Walter Leimgruber and Borna Fuerst-Bjeliš, Conclusion
Borna Fuerst-Bjeliš is aprofessor at the University of Zagreb (Croatia). Her research interests are mainly focused on borderlands areas, spatial perceptions and spatial (regional) identities, environmental history and landscape change, including the development of methodologies of research. Since 2016 she is the member of the Steering Committee of the IGU Commission on Marginalization, Globalization and Regional and Local Response. She has been also serving as the vice-president of the European Society for Environmental History (2017–19). She has co-authored 6 textbooks, edited 3 books and authored or co-authored more than 90 papers, among which 56 peer reviewed scholarly book chapters and research journal articles.
Walter Leimgruber is an emeritus professor of the University of Fribourg (Switzerland) where he taught human and regional geography from 1982 to 2009. He presided the Swiss Geographical Society and Association of Swiss Geographers (1987–1989) and was chair of the IGU Commission on Evolving Issues of Geographical Marginality in the Early 21st Century World (2000–2004). His research focused on boundaries and transborder relations and on mountains and marginal regions. He has authored or co-authored 11 books, 47 book chapters and 79 articles.
This book looks at marginality from a less conventional perspective by analyzing complex social, cultural, political and economic relations between the aspects of globalization and various forms of marginalization. It focuses specifically on the conflict potential that results from the globalization-driven inequality and marginalization of many segments of societies. This view is further illustrated in sections on border regions, identity issues, minorities and poverty. The book gives a comprehensive but in-depth analysis of the various aspects of the relations between globalization, marginalization and conflict issues, based on a number of case studies and regions worldwide. It shows how the same issues of globalization and marginalization manifest themselves in different ways under different circumstance, obviously requiring different solutions. Based on original research, this book provides new insights on the globalization-marginalization relations and a good resource to academics, scientists and students in various fields of social, political science and humanities.