Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-2014
Abstract
This article explores the relationship between information and mobility as it is manifest at the Mexico-US border and understands that border to be one, although very important, site of information processing and production. Within the electronic as well as the physical spaces of the Mexico-US borderlands, it is argued that practices of evasion and exposure produce specific forms of politics. These forms bear on the militarization of the border, particular bourgeois anxieties, various instances of violence, the pursuit of survival strategies and recognition, and the emergence of resistance and countertactics. Also considered are possibilities for alternatives to the ways mobility is governed and challenged in the borderlands especially as it bears on the lives of migrants.
Recommended Citation
Robert Latham, The Governance of Visibility: Bodies, Information, and the Politics of Anonymity across the US-Mexico Borderlands, 39 Alt.: Glob., Loc., Pol. 17 (2014).