AUC Studia Territorialia (Acta Universitatis Carolinae Studia Territorialia) is a peer-reviewed academic journal focusing on Area Studies. It covers political, economic, social, and cultural affairs of North America, Europe, and post-Soviet Eurasia in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The journal was founded in 2001; currently, it appears biannually, both electronically and in print. It publishes original scholarly articles, book reviews, conference reports and research notes. The journal is a publication of the Institute of International Studies at Charles University’s Faculty of Social Sciences.
AUC STUDIA TERRITORIALIA, Vol 25 No 2 (2025), 43–70
Article“Borderization” as a Tool of Gray Zone Warfare: The Case of Georgia
Olga Dorokhina
DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/23363231.2026.3
published online: 25. 03. 2026
abstract
This article analyzes “borderization” in Georgia – the process of unilaterally erecting physical barriers and control regimes along administrative lines with Abkhazia and the former South Ossetian Autonomous District – through the prism of the concept of gray zones. The study answers the question: how does the process of borderization contribute to the institutionalization of legal and spatial uncertainty, and to what extent can it be interpreted as a form of gray zone tactics? Based on a critical synthesis of military-strategic, institutional, and operational approaches, this study proposes a working definition of gray zones as sustainable regimes of coercion below the thresholds of war, characterized by difficult attribution of the source of actions and controlled escalation. The analysis is based on policy documents, reports from international organizations, and long-term field observation (2009–2024). The findings demonstrate that borderization functions as a gray zone regime through legal ambivalence, spatio-temporal transformation, and their informational articulation. This regime ensures territorial control without open war or formal annexation. The conceptual contribution consists in defining the minimum core of gray zones as applied to territorial conflicts and identifying the structural connection between gray zones and border areas.
keywords: borderization; gray zones; territorial conflicts; legal ambivalence; spatial control; Russia; Georgia; South Ossetia; Abkhazia

“Borderization” as a Tool of Gray Zone Warfare: The Case of Georgia is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
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ISSN: 1213-4449
E-ISSN: 2336-3231