Human Organization
Volume 66, Issue 4, 2007, Pages 354-365

Entrapment processes and immigrant communities in a time of heightened border vigilance (Article)

Núñez G.* , Heyman J.
  • a Department of Anthropology, University of Texas, El Paso, United States
  • b Department of Anthropology, University of Texas, El Paso, United States

Abstract

In processes of entrapment, police and other state agencies impose significant risk to moving around, while people themselves exercise various forms of agency by both limiting themselves and covertly defying movement controls. Recent US immigration and border enforcement policy has entrapped undocumented immigrants, in particular on the United States side of the US-Mexico border region. We explore how to operationalize this "macro" pattern in ethnographic research, making the conceptually and methodologically significant point that political-legal forces are only one among many elements leading to entrapment and immobilization; other factors include transportation constraints, poor health, etc. The concept of "morality of risk" is also introduced to help us understand how and why trapped people would take severe risks to defy immigration policing. Three ethnographic cases are examined, noting the complex mix of movement and barriers found in them. We conclude with the significance of entrapment for applied and basic social science: first, for the analysis of spatial mobility, enclosure, and inequalities of movement; second, for public policy; and third, for the methods and ethics of researching trapped and hidden populations. Copyright © 2007 by the Society for Applied Anthropology.

Author Keywords

Migration Entrapment mobility US-Mexico Border morality Risk Colonias Networks

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-51249146829&doi=10.17730%2fhumo.66.4.v32mp32167k8l705&partnerID=40&md5=645993c69db9b4a94c681d2ca926a4ea

DOI: 10.17730/humo.66.4.v32mp32167k8l705
ISSN: 00187259
Cited by: 76
Original Language: English