4.5 Article

I Don't Want You in My Country: Migrants Navigating Borderland Violences between Colombia and Chile

Journal

ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERS
Volume 112, Issue 5, Pages 1424-1440

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2021.1976097

Keywords

borderlands; migration; navigation; South America; violence

Categories

Funding

  1. British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship

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This article combines anthropological and feminist geography perspectives to explore the challenges faced by Colombian and Venezuelan migrants along a 4,500 km migration route. Through the lens of borderlands, it analyzes interactions between actors and their navigation strategies in the borderlands.
Through the lens of navigating borderlands, this article brings together the anthropology-derived concept of social navigation (Vigh 2006) with a feminist geography approach to borderlands, enriching both. It is based on ethnographic research with Colombian and Venezuelan migrants along the 4,500-km migration route from the Valle del Cauca, Colombia, to Antofagasta, Chile, and additionally informed by further multisited ethnography in Antofagasta and the Valle del Cauca. The borderlands perspective bridges gaps between migration, border, and mobility studies by combining feminist scholarship on transnational social spaces and borders and violence with a reflexive migration trajectories methodology. It considers how the shifting space of the often violent borderland is constructed through interactions between diverse actors. Paying greater attention to the construction of space enhances the analytical potential of social navigation. In turn, analyzing actors' negotiations of the borderland in terms of navigation illuminates how they move in and through unpredictable spaces. Specifically, this article considers how actors including border officers, transport providers, scammers, and nongovernmental organization workers police, move, and reroute in the borderland. It also reveals how migrants navigate interactions with these varied actors to aguantar (endure/cope/hold on); although not resistance per se, aguantar may sometimes be a form of defiance.

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