Rangeland Ecology & Management

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How conservation and humanitarian groups respond to production of border security on the Arizona–Sonora border
Author
Shellabarger, Rachel
Peterson, Markus N.
Stills, Erin
Publisher
Local Environment
Publication Year
2012
Body

US policies for securing the border with Mexico are driven by multiple political concerns, including the desire to control illegal trade and immigration in a way that conveys “border security” to a national audience. Highly visible border enforcement near urban centres and via the border fence has pushed migrants into far less visible and remote wilderness areas, driving both ecological degradation and a humanitarian crisis. This study employed ethnographic methods to explore how natural resource agency employees and humanitarian volunteers in Altar Valley Arizona perceived and responded to the production of border security. We found that both groups recognised human rights and environmental concerns, although they assigned different priorities and addressed them through conflicting means. As in other cases where consumers are separated from production practices, there was a general consensus among informants that it was important to raise the consciousness of the national audience about the negative externalities of producing border security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1080/13549839.2012.678311
Journal Volume
17
Journal Number
4
Journal Pages
481-493
Journal Name
Local Environment
Keywords
Altar Valley
Arizona
Border Security
environmental justice
migration