UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London, 7th Annual International Postgraduate Conference
Inclusion Exclusion
12:00 – 1:30: Panel A3: Borders
Sabrina Vidalenc (Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris): ‘Delimiting and opening Sino-Russian border: territories and migrations at stake’
Just before the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Russian and
Chinese States started intensive negotiation in order to set the
demarcation for the Sino-Russian Eastern border (some 4,300 km).
Concerned about carrying out an exhaustive and continual demarcation to
better assert the sovereignty of States, this new demarcation enabled
them to transform a massive and expensive military presence into a new
and visible borderline. Reviving territorial assertion by delimiting
borderline aims at making explicit the exclusion of each neighbouring
part as well as the inclusion of their own part. This demarcation
process perturbed some Russian bordering population. Sovereignty of
some islands is still controversial today.
Moreover, it seems that the border is crossed by the new migrant flows
emerging from the post-Cold War world. The Sino-Russian border is
mishandled by the number of Chinese migrants, who cross it by pendulum
movements of inclusion and exclusion in and out Russian territory. Even
though borders are supposed to assume protection of the outlines, cross
bordering bears witness to inability of the new Russian Federation to
control this flows. Some bordering populations in the under populated
Russian Far East feel threatened by Chinese migrations coming from the
overpopulated provinces of North-Eastern China.
I thus intend to analyse, as previously above, the antithetical
movements of demarcation and migration. And concerning to the Chinese
migration in Russia, my aim is to examine its characteristics and the
diverse reactions of the Russian side at the State level, at the
regional level as well as among Russian society. I will show afterwards
what are the modes of adaptation that the Russian State implements to
face this new mobility. I will analyse if the Russian State is able to
use the Chinese migration to resolve some domestic problems or the
Chinese migration is considered as a burden and even a threat to the
Russian sovereignty and to the border integrity.