Area
Volume 48, Issue 3, 2016, Pages 271-277

Captive bodies: migrant kidnapping and deportation in Mexico (Article)

Slack J.*
  • a Department of Sociology and Anthropology, The University of Texas, El Paso, TX 79902, United States

Abstract

Kidnapping, originally considered a problem for the super wealthy, has quickly spread to epidemic proportions among the relative poor, especially among clandestine international migrants. This article examines how people's relationship to the US–Mexico border shapes their vulnerability to kidnapping. Moreover, through one long ethnographic vignette and survey data of deportees' experiences with kidnapping, this article explores how the border helps produce and shape kidnapping. By exploring the border as topological, based on the relationships created through clandestine migration and deportation, we can see how kidnapping operates to produce certain, highly varied subjectivities. Moreover, this article explores the contours of sexuality and masculinity for a feminist geopolitical take on some of the darkest chapters of the war on drugs in Mexico. © 2015 Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)

Author Keywords

US–Mexico border Migration Mixed-methods kidnapping feminist geopolitics drug violence

Index Keywords

violence international migration geopolitics Mexico [North America] feminism sexuality border region drugs trade population migration gender role

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84981515967&doi=10.1111%2farea.12151&partnerID=40&md5=2f2f4cffb7121e23596bea9a287c5b83

DOI: 10.1111/area.12151
ISSN: 00040894
Cited by: 18
Original Language: English