
Enjoy fast, free delivery, exclusive deals, and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime
Try Prime
and start saving today with fast, free delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Streaming of thousands of movies and TV shows with limited ads on Prime Video.
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Buy new:
-15% $23.81$23.81
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Dulcet Ecommerce
Save with Used - Good
$20.29$20.29
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Roosetertool Services

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Violent Borders: Refugees and the Right to Move Hardcover – October 11, 2016
Purchase options and add-ons
“In an era of terrorism, global inequality, and rising political tension over migration, Jones argues that tight border controls make the world worse, not better.” —Boston Globe
Forty thousand people have died trying to cross between countries in the past decade, and yet international borders only continue to harden. The United Kingdom has voted to leave the European Union; the United States elected a president who campaigned on building a wall; while elsewhere, the popularity of right-wing antimigrant nationalist political parties is surging.
Reece Jones argues that the West has helped bring about the deaths of countless migrants, as states attempt to contain populations and limit access to resources and opportunities. “We may live in an era of globalization,” he writes, “but much of the world is increasingly focused on limiting the free movement of people.”
In Violent Borders, Jones crosses the migrant trails of the world, documenting the billions of dollars spent on border security projects and the dire consequences for countless millions. While the poor are restricted by the lottery of birth to slum dwellings in the ailing decolonized world, the wealthy travel without constraint, exploiting pools of cheap labor and lax environmental regulations. With the growth of borders and resource enclosures, the deaths of migrants in search of a better life are intimately connected to climate change, environmental degradation, and the growth of global wealth inequality.
- Print length224 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVerso
- Publication dateOctober 11, 2016
- Dimensions5.84 x 0.84 x 8.62 inches
- ISBN-101784784710
- ISBN-13978-1784784713
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Editorial Reviews
Review
—Vijay Prashad, author of The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South
“A much-needed counter to a thousand newspaper columns calling on us to secure our borders, Reece Jones’ Violent Borders goes beyond the headlines to look at the deeper causes of the migration crisis. Borders, Jones convincingly argues, are a means of inflicting violence on poor people. This is an engaging and lucid analysis of a much misunderstood issue.”
—Arun Kundnani, author of The Muslims Are Coming: Islamophobia, Extremism, and the Domestic War on Terror
“From early modern land enclosures through Westphalian state formation to the current fortification of the US–Mexico frontier, Reece Jones explains what a boundary is, and how national sovereignty is being reinforced, in an age of capital mobility, by the crackdown on human movement across borders.”
—Jeremy Harding, author of Border Vigils: Keeping Migrants Out of the Rich World
“In an era of terrorism, global inequality, and rising political tension over migration, Jones argues that tight border controls make the world worse, not better.”
—Boston Globe (recommended books for fall 2016)
“A fierce polemicist.”
—Rowan Williams, New Statesman
“Promise[s] to take your arguments from the general to the specific … The United States is one of a few countries whose immigration philosophy is jus solis or right of land, which means that if you spend enough time on US territory you have a right to citizenship. But who has that right and if it matters how they entered is our all-consuming question. In Violent Borders, Jones provides plenty of examples of how these semantic arguments lead to inequality, isolation, racism, and institutional loss of liberty for entire groups of people.”
—Ingrid Rojas Contreras, KQED
“With the building of border walls and the deaths of migrants much in the news, this work is both timely and necessarily provocative.”
—Kirkus
“The breadth and spread of Jones’s historical examples and empirical case studies make for stimulating and engaging reading.”
—Nando Sigona, Current History
“Reece Jones believes that borders are essentially tools of violence used to constrict and sometimes entirely stop flows of humanity. And Jones has the facts to back up this radical assertion … This book is a valuable antidote to the xenophobia sweeping the privileged nations of the Northern Hemisphere.”
—East Bay Express
“Violent Borders goes beyond most considerations of refugee history to consider how new borders are formed and policed, and how state attempts to contain and control populations and allocate resources have resulted in many limits to peoples’ movements around the world … A powerful survey that should be a ‘must’ for any social issues collection.”
—Midwest Book Review
“Violent Borders puts questions of movement and intrastate inequality in a historical perspective that once glimpsed cannot be unseen. It firmly, and convincingly, maintains that borders are nothing more than state tools for maintaining control of resources and populations, the beneficiaries of which are often the rich while those who suffer its intrinsically violent wrath are the poor who seek safety within its walls … An excellent read.”
—Arab Weekly
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Verso; First Edition (October 11, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 224 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1784784710
- ISBN-13 : 978-1784784713
- Item Weight : 13.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.84 x 0.84 x 8.62 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,079,458 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #161 in Immigration Policy
- #795 in Emigration & Immigration Studies (Books)
- #8,853 in Sociology Reference
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Reece Jones is a 2021 Guggenheim Fellow and a Professor and the Chair of the Department of Geography and Environment at the University of Hawai‘i. He is the author of two award-winning books Border Walls (2012) and Violent Borders (2016) as well as over two dozen journal articles and four edited books. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the journal Geopolitics and he lives in Honolulu with his family.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2018This book provides very good and accessible analysis of today's border, migrant and environmental issues. It provides interesting insights in a global and historical context.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2021Lots of great stories
- Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2016This book is thought provoking on an important topic that easy to be blind to if you live in most of the US. The first several chapters specifically drive home the point that no one does dangerous border crossings unless they have to, and he does an excellent job of drawing you into the plight of refugees. He does a good job questioning policy assumptions and pointing out flaws in policies and political moves made to skirt the issue.
On other other hand, I wasn't totally comfortable with his premise that rich nations only want to maintain their wealth and that's why they keep immigrants out. I'm not sure it's so cut and dry and I am inclined to think there are more factors at play than wealthy white nations keeping poor people out. It seems to me that wealthy nations tend to be more stable and that an influx of refugees could certainly cause chaos and civil unrest. I don't have a degree in this and haven't read much about it so I could be wrong, but I wasn't convinced that the premise was right and therefore wasn't entirely convinced that the borders should just be opened and everyone allowed freedom of movement either.
I did appreciate his perspective, I just didn't find it completely convincing.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 11, 2019All ok
- Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2016The author "disputes the idea that borders are a natural part of the human world" and believes that "the existence of the border itself produces the violence that surrounds it." Political borders "are not the result of a transparent sorting of historical peoples into their own territories" but rather "an efficient system for maintaining political control of an area through agreements and documents that are backed up with the threat of violence." He sees borders as fundamentally violent, and thus embraces and employs a "broader and more nuanced definition of violence" than many people will find intuitive.
Much, then, depends on the author's presenting a clear and persuasive account of what 'structural violence' is and how it is (and is not) morally equivalent to 'direct violence.' To cut to the chase, I don't think he does it. He is not entirely at fault for that: It is an ambitious claim, and does not lend itself to short discussion on the way to making other points. But it is the fulcrum nonetheless.
I certainly approached the book with a lot of sympathy for the view that the current response of the affluent western nations to the 'refugee crisis' (a troubled and tendentious way to describe the predicaments of the people who are fleeing their native lands to seek refuge from war, persecution, or crippling poverty). And I certainly think that the heavy militarization of the US border has been, and remains, a tragic misdirection of policy. So I wanted to be persuaded by this book to see borders as the author does. I wasn't. The author's premisesand assumptions are contestable, the arguments are thin, and the history he presents is so synoptic as to raise serious questions about the omissions, which casts doubt on the soundness of the author's overall narrative, and his frequent invocation of doubtful analogies.
The idea that there is such a thing as a 'transparent' sorting of people strikes me as naive, and doubtful. Who gets included in a group and who gets excluded from it is, and no doubt always has been, contestable. And the idea that there is clarity (and thus defensibility?) in saying who it is that is a 'historical people' and what their 'own territory' was is no better. The human population has increased vastly (and unevenly), and many more people have married across categories (to put it politely). There would be pressures and tensions about whose territory is whose--and thus, 'structural violence'--even if one believed that one could sort humans into 'historical people' categories.
I think that the best parts of the book are the largely descriptive ones (chapters one and two). Here the author's evident sympathy for the people caught up in border violence is powerful, and moving.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2016This was a subject I wanted to get into. The question for me was if the author took the right frame from which to write and could the author cover the bases of the subject matter in a deep; rather than superficial manner. Not only was the author's viewpoint but spot on, but was deep in its analyses/the violence of borders today is emblematic of a broader system that seeks to preserve privilege and opportunity for some by restricting access to resources and movement for others.
Jones goes behind the issuance in passport/In the 20th century, with the sovereign states of Westphalia more entrenched, the movement of the poor from one state to another led to a new system of passports and visa to establish identity and citizenship and thereby restrict movement. Then goes to the second half of the century to one of the last bastions of free movement, the high seas, and how that was carved up at the United Nations. The billions of dollars spent on mapping, enclosing, and bounding territories have dramatically transformed, restricted, and controlled the movements of people[from this reader's perspective - the borders and immigration itself have become weaponized/read: The Lost Hegemon, Whom The Gods Would Destroy by F. William Engdahl 2016].
Jones tells the reader/The violence is built into the structure and shows up as unequal power and consequently unequal life chances. Jones then goes into depth in the varied ways this border violence manifests itself around the globe.
The first chapter deals with why the EU became the locus of the current crisis. The second chapter turns to the U.S. border w/Mexico and how it turned into deadly spaces of violent security practices. The third chapter visits borders around the world showing the structures are engineered to become inherently violent. From this first half Jones moves into the second half to showcases other types of boundaries, such as private property and resource enclosures on land and at sea, are long-term and widespread parts of how states maintain privileges by restricting movements.
Chapter five was my favorite chapter which begins with the Midland Revolt of 1607-the largest peasant uprising in the history of England-by telling the improbable story of Captain Pouch who convince his followers that the contents of his magical pouch would protect them from all harm as he led the revolt against the enclosure of the common land into private property[another day in infamy].
I would have liked the author to expose the TPP/TTIP treaty; usurps nation-state constitutions globally, including the U.S. Constitution - making those nation-state instruments subservient to the new International Corporate Constitution. Those nations who sign, will have given their sovereignty away to the transnational corporations[although technically, giving the right to issue your Nation-State's currency to a private banking cartel[FED, or any entity other entity than the state itself] is loosing your sovereignty - recommended books on this subject are - Web of Debt by Ellen Brown and/or Killing The Host: How Financial Parasites and Debt Destroy The Global Economy by Michael Hudson 2015.
For those who want a deep and information-rich work on borders' crisis this is it.
Top reviews from other countries
- Yelena KarlReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 19, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Speedy service. Excellent product.
Speedy service. Excellent product.
-
Luca GattoReviewed in Italy on April 18, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Molto di più
Comprai questo libri aspettandomi un racconto crudo delle violenze delle frontiere, del modo in cui gli Stati “difendono” i loro confini dai flussi migratori. Quello che ho trovato leggendo questo libro rispecchia in parte quanto mi aspettavo, ma in realtà il libro è molto di più. Ricollegandosi a fatti di cronaca e alla realtà dei giorni nostri, ripercorre lo sviluppo delle frontiere e dell’insita violenza che il concetto evoca: chi sta dentro e chi sta fuori, la demarcazione della proprietà, lo sfruttamento delle risorse, l’esclusione. Reece Jones riesce a delineare in modo semplice e chiaro i pressanti problemi e le gravi iniquità di un sistema di statualità nato a partire dalla pace di Westfalia e perpetuato fino ai giorni nostri. La tesi finale sostenuta è quella “aperturista” (open borders). Benché non abbia mai avuto grande simpatia per questa visione, ammetto che gli argomenti avanzati a suo favore mi hanno colpito e interessato, soprattutto il reddito minimo globale che potrebbe essere la soluzione meno “dannosa” per fronteggiare e provare a risolvere la questione migratoria. Consigliato!
- David MReviewed in Canada on October 19, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read.
I highly recommend this book to everyone, it's been very eye-opening.
- James HigginsReviewed in Canada on October 5, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars This book makes a strong case for the abolition of arbitrary borders, this isn't for everybody
I am someone who does not believe in the use of national borders. More death and misery has been caused in the name of lines haphazardly snaking across the map than good. This is not an easy idea for many people to grasp and trying to get this conversation going in the parking lot of your kids' school with the other parents will probably not get you far. This book is quite meticulously thought out and exhaustingly researched. That said, as a position paper, it fails to account for the other side of the argument so that you can make your own judgment. Of course, I don't know too many books that will be that balanced anyway so make of that what you will. For me, the sad fact is that borders have served the ruling class ever since the ruling class started claiming other people's land for themselves through the use of military might. I can't think of a time that it's served the people who actually till the soil within any of these borders. Today, there are 65,000,000+ refugees moving about in the biggest migration of people ever and our power structures really don't want you thinking about anything other than it's reasonable they are used for target practice.