Im/Mobility at the US–Mexico Border during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Título

Im/Mobility at the US–Mexico Border during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Autor

Sarah A. Blue, Jennifer A. Devine, Matthew P. Ruiz, Kathryn McDaniel, Alisa R. Hartsell, Christopher J. Pierce, Makayla Johnson, Allison K. Tinglov, Mei Yang, Xiu Wu, Sara Moya, Elle Cross, Carol Anne Starnes

Descripción

In March 2020, the United States government began a series of measures designed to dramatically restrict immigration as part of its response to the global health crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic. This included Title 42, which deported asylum seekers immediately and prevented them from applying for asylum. These measures worsened an already precarious situation at the US–Mexico border for an estimated 60,000 asylum seekers who were prevented, by the Trump administration’s ‘Remain in Mexico’ (aka MPP) policy enacted in January 2019, from remaining in the United States while they awaited their asylum hearings. In-depth interviews, participant observation, and social media analysis with humanitarian and legal advocates for asylum seekers living in a camp at the border in Matamoros, Mexico reveal that COVID-19’s impacts are not limited to public health concerns. Rather, COVID-19’s impacts center on how the Trump administration weaponized the virus to indefinitely suspend the asylum system. We argue that the Matamoros refugee camp provides a strategic vantage point to understand the repercussions of state policies of exclusion on im/mobility and survival strategies for asylum seekers. Specifically, we use the analytical lenses of the politics of im/mobility, geographies of exclusion, and asylum seeker resilience to identify how COVID-19 has shaped the im/mobility and security of the camp and its residents in unexpected ways. At the same time, our research illustrates that camp residents exercise im/mobility as a form of political visibility to contest and ameliorate their precarity as they find themselves in conditions not of their choosing.

Fecha

2021

Materia

covid-19, asylum, US–Mexico border, Immobility, refugee camp

Identificador

10.3390/socsci10020047

Fuente

Epidemiology and Health

Editor

Korean Society of Epidemiology

Cobertura

Social Sciences

Archivos

https://socictopen.socict.org/files/to_import/pdfs/f60d5e9e2082870ff3dfe3b57737ada3.pdf

Colección

Citación

Sarah A. Blue, Jennifer A. Devine, Matthew P. Ruiz, Kathryn McDaniel, Alisa R. Hartsell, Christopher J. Pierce, Makayla Johnson, Allison K. Tinglov, Mei Yang, Xiu Wu, Sara Moya, Elle Cross, Carol Anne Starnes, “Im/Mobility at the US–Mexico Border during the COVID-19 Pandemic,” SOCICT Open, consulta 17 de abril de 2026, https://www.socictopen.socict.org/items/show/5571.

Formatos de Salida

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