Entre Ríos: Surveillance and Futurity in the US-Mexico Borderlands
Dr. Darcy Alexandra
Entre Ríos: Surveillance and Futurity in the US-Mexico Borderlands, positions the Sonoran Desert as a vital place from which to study contesting theories of futurity. Within this landscape of deadly migration policies, extractive surveillance infrastructure, and some of the most unique ecological networks in the Americas, the research aims to learn from the multiple stakeholders who are imagining more equitable and livable futures.
In the wake of climate change, anthropologists increasingly position the future as an urgent object of study. Circumventing the apocalyptic Game Over climate scenario, new attention is focused on developing a nuanced consideration of the borders where people and other living beings are shaping possible futures. Formed through inter-dependent relations of attention and care (Haraway 2016), these borderlands are found in trans-species engagements unfolding in the ruins of capitalism (Tsing 2015). Building from the divergent histories of two rivers, the San Pedro and Santa Cruz watersheds, this audio-visual ethnography will examine borderlands futurity in relation to notions of collective wellbeing and security.
Surveillance technologies hold competing significance and objectives in the US-Mexico borderlands. On the one hand, state surveillance is a long-standing aspect of settler colonialism and an everyday reality of life for borderlands dwellers, in particular since the introduction of Prevention through Deterrence. This statecraft includes a "virtual wall" of integrated fixed towers (IFTs), resource-intensive infrastructure, and the production of massive surveillance data. In the construction and maintenance of border surveillance infrastructure, water extraction is essential. On the other hand, environmental scientists, citizen-scientists, and community activists also employ diverse statecraft technologies to study and protect riparian waterways, wildlife, and travel corridors along the "Sky Islands.”
Due to the centrality of water in this arid region, water defense activism, watershed maintenance and restoration and sensor-tracking documentation of borderlands wildlife in riparian areas are conceptualized as “hydro-social practices of care.” These practices are placed in relation to surveillance technologies as a means to examine alternative notions of futurity. In response to calls for scholarship that develops new visual and epistemological frameworks for reimagining the borderlands, the research combines critical Indigenous studies with ethnographic poetry and moving and still image. In this way, the research aims to reveal generative hydro-social poetics of care during uncertain times.