Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Diabolic Caminos in the Desert and Cat Fights on the Rio: A Posthumanist Political Ecology of Boundary Enforcement in the United States-Mexico Borderlands.
Author
Sundberg, Juanita
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication Year
2011
Body

Abstract:

This article makes the case for addressing nonhumans as actors in geopolitical processes such as boundary making and enforcement. The challenge of this line of argumentation is to account for nonhumans as actors without enacting dualistic ontologies that locate the natural and social in separate realms. To address this methodological challenge, I present a posthumanist political ecology. I elaborate my argument and methodological approach in relation to my research on the environmental dimensions of U.S. border security. Specifically, I examine how deserts, rivers, Tamaulipan Thornscrub, and cats inflect, disrupt, and obstruct the daily practices of boundary enforcement, leading state actors to call for more funding, infrastructure, boots on the ground, and surveillance technology. As my research illustrates, taking nonhumans seriously as actors alters explanations for the escalation of U.S. enforcement strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Additional Information
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/bwep/colloquium/papers/Sundberg_Berkele...
IISN
45608
Journal Volume
101
Journal Number
2
Journal Pages
318-336
Journal Name
Annals of the Association of American Geographers
Keywords
Altar Valley
Arizona
Border Enforcement
Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge
United States