Sensors, Cameras, and the New ‘Normal’ in Clandestine Migration: How Undocumented Migrants Experience Surveillance at the U.S.-Mexico Border

Author:

Newell Bryce Clayton,Gomez Ricardo,Guajardo Verónica E.

Abstract

This paper presents findings from an exploratory qualitative study of the experiences and perceptions of undocumented (irregular) migrants to the United States with various forms of surveillance in the borderlands between the U.S. and Mexico. Based on fieldwork conducted primarily in a migrant shelter in Nogales, Mexico, we find that migrants generally have a fairly sophisticated understanding about U.S. Border Patrol surveillance and technology use and that they consciously engage in forms of resistance or avoidance. Heightened levels of border surveillance may be deterring a minority of migrants from attempting immediate future crossings, but most interviewees were undeterred in their desire to enter the U.S., preferring to find ways to avoid government surveillance. Furthermore, migrants exhibit a general lack of trust in the “promise” of technology to improve their circumstances and increase their safety during clandestine border-crossing—often due to fears that technology use makes them vulnerable to state surveillance, tracking, and arrest.

Publisher

Queen's University Library

Subject

Urban Studies,Safety Research

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1. Detection Avoidance in UK Border Immigration Crime;Cases on Forensic and Criminological Science for Criminal Detection and Avoidance;2024-05-17

2. In/Visible Line: The Physical and Symbolic Power of the US-Mexico Border;Journal of Borderlands Studies;2024-04-12

3. Drawing a Map in the Sand: Locating an Ethics of Care in the ICT-Related Migration Practices of Older Volunteers in the US Southwest;IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology;2024

4. Publishing the Data from “The Effects of Communication Mode and Culture on Deception Detection Accuracy”;Journal of Information Systems;2023-06-01

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