"Within a literature and dominant political discourse that overwhelmingly continue to view borders as obstacles, this book regards borders as performative: it asks what borders ‘do’, rather than what they ‘are’. By asking how borders produce—rather than only thwart—desires, the authors look afresh at the many ways gender and sexuality are at issue in border crossing. Considering desire, they return attention to the agency, humanity and imagination of border crossers and offer a glimpse into the complexity of their dreams, their decision-making and their experiences." Jane Cowan, Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, University of Sussex"Empirically grounded and conceptually consistent, this collection is a fascinating sociological and anthropological read. It challenges the view of Europe as a homogeneous project and offers a nuanced vision of this area through its multiple borders and the diverse mutual desires of citizens of adjacent European countries with different historical, political and economic backgrounds. I would highly recommend this book to a multidisciplinary readership, including scholars of migration, gender and sexuality studies, postcolonial and postsocialist studies, European studies and political science, as well as media and memory studies, in addition to border researchers."Olga Tkach, Journal of Borderlands Studies"This volume provides pivotal insights into important immediate antecedents to current anxieties, imaginaries, and controversies playing out on Europe’s eastern borders."Katharina Wegmann, Comparative Southeast European Studies'Unarguably, one of its most important contributions is the conceptualization of borders as porous and contingent. Under the current geopolitical tensions and the hardening of state borders between the EU states with Russia and Belarus as well as the symbolically hardening of borders between Israel and the Middle East, reflecting the ‘othering’ processes, the book reveals how border territories that Anzaldúa (1987) and Vila (2003) describe as being infiltrated with hatred, anger, and exploitations, may at the same time create and be filled with various forms of desires. These desires inevitably make the borders porous, revealing their artificiality, yet importance in forming identities and communities and imagining other ways.'Pauliina Lukinmaa, Nordic Journal of Migration Research