Widdis, Randy W.Atkinson, DavidBrunet-Jailly, EmmanuelTakai, YukariTerrazas y Basante, MarcelaNieto Camacho, Ana LiliaHogue, Michel2024-06-262024-06-262024978-1-55058-728-9 (PDF)978-1-55058-727-2 (Print)https://hdl.handle.net/1828/16673BIG_Books series, #3Borders are historically contingent and evolve through processes of bordering. Their meanings are constantly changing along with political, economic, and social developments taking place both externally between and internally within states. Like borders, borderlands must also be situated in their temporal and geographical contexts in order to investigate the relations between territory, identity, and sovereignty. The chapters in this collection present selective historical interpretations of borders and borderlands that focus primarily on North American borderlands, emphasizing flows, sovereignty, and indigeneity, three key themes of the Borders in Globalization program.enAttribution-NonCommercial 4.0 InternationalHistory and North American borderlands: Insights and approachesBook