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Pages: [1] [2] The Niagara Frontier: Border Zone or "Middle Ground"?David L. HerzbergOf course, encounters between peoples do not always produce cooperative middle grounds. They can be destructive as well. The Niagara River is no exception; it has witnessed its share of bloodshed. But the Niagara Frontier's best moments have occurred when the people living on both sides of the river have pragmatically recognized their common stock of cultural, economic, and environmental problems and opportunities. Some of these have been obvious, such as tapping the potential of the Falls to power industry and tourism, or building canals and railroads to establish the region as a center of trade and transportation.Others have been more subtle, such as building upon regional solidarity to foster a durable and surprisingly peaceful international zone of cultural and economic interdependence.Each instance represents a successful effort to transform shared problems into shared opportunities through cooperative effort to imagine the region as a middle ground instead of a border zone. The Niagara Frontier today faces a slate of issues that do not, in some respects, differ so much from what has always confronted the region: how to reap the benefits of a unique cultural heritage; how to further facilitate trade and transportation; how to adapt to economic and technological change by re-using old industrial sites (“brownfields”); how to take advantage of the region’s many natural and built attractions; and how to encourage the growth of new industries, especially in the arena of information technology. These are fields of endeavor that call for region-wide action. They are problems that become opportunities if considered from the vantage point of the middle ground. As the recent Peace Bridge chronicles illustrate, the prevailing tendency today is to pursue separate processes even when goals are essentially the same. Nonetheless, the history of the Niagara Frontier is one of cooperation hard-won against just such backdrops of tension and conflict. It offers hope, and concrete precedents, that can sharpen our vision of today’s opportunities for collaboration even as we recognize the realities of division.
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