Lisa Lowe,
"The Gender of Sovereignty"
(page 5 of 7)
The contemporary production of an "immigration" crisis is only the
most recent moment in a much longer U.S. history of peaks in
anti-immigrant sentiment during periods of national insecurity: whether
Chinese, Irish, Jewish, Mexican, or Russian, or even freed slaves
migrating to Northern cities after the Civil War. In the last decade,
Immigration and Nationality Service (INS) inspectors at checkpoints
along the U.S.-Mexico border have reported increases in human
trafficking and smuggling; they find people rolled inside carpets, sewn
into car seats, and stuffed into washing machines. At the Tecate Port
of Entry, a 5-year old girl was discovered, meticulously sealed inside a
piñata.[38]
Border enforcement projects, like Operation
Gatekeeper, have added expensive fencing and militarized the urban
border areas. Meanwhile, the Border Patrol has unearthed dozens of
elaborate underground tunnels straddling the border through which
migrants and goods are smuggled. Yet while the increased militarization
of the border has made "illegal" crossing more difficult and treacherous,
it has not reduced the numbers of people putting
themselves at risk to work in the U.S. Border officials suggest that
the militarization of the border has made it dangerous and even fatal
for male migrants to cross back and forth, and has forced these men to
work undocumented in the U.S. Women and children remain in Mexico, or
pay expensive "coyotes" to smuggle them across. Yet this production of
a contemporary "immigration crisis" absents the historically unequal
relationship between the U.S. and Mexico, which reaches back to the
conquest and war in the 19th-century, continued in the subordination and
exploitation of Mexican residents in the U.S. as noncitizen workers, and
is exacerbated by neoliberal globalization today.[39]
The Mexican debt crisis of 1982, and Mexico's entry into the General Agreement on Tariff
and Trade (GATT) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA),
decisively opened the country to global economic restructuring and
reconfigured many border areas as export processing zones for
multinational corporations. Peso devaluation and neoliberal reforms
have resulted in even more dramatic cuts in Mexican state provisions for
education and health care, sending greater numbers of people into
poverty. All of the human traffic at the border takes place in the
context of these longstanding global inequalities.
In other words, even as global conditions disaggregate state
sovereignty, the state still continues to flex its muscles to exert a
role in border and immigration policies, though its power is challenged
by transnational corporations, regional treaties, or supranational
organizations that actually promote transnational immigration to satisfy
the demand for inexpensive labor. In this sense, the U.S. targeting of
"illegal immigration" must be understood as a performance of narrow
government power in the face of declining state sovereignty. As Saskia
Sassen observes, "the exclusivity and scope of state competence has
changed, and there is a narrowing range within which the state's
authority and legitimacy operates."[40]
To focus on "illegal
immigration" is to disavow the long, extensive relationship of conquest
and exploitation between the U.S. and Mexico, which today includes
enormous corporate profits both from undocumented labor in the U.S., and
from the maquiladoras in Mexico. Since the 1970s, U.S. investors
have profited greatly from the low cost of Mexican labor, where wages
are maintained by agreements between the Mexican state, the unions, and
the corporations. With the end of the Bracero Program that had supplied
mostly male labor to U.S., the Mexican government established
maquiladora factories at the border, employing over 850,000
workers, more than 50 percent of whom are girls. Employing mostly girls
and women exploits their structural vulnerability in family and society,
and deepens and reproduces patriarchal gender relations in the
workplace.[41]
For Mexico's centralized government and the large
state-run unions who view the maquiladoras as a strategy for
national development, as well as for multinational corporations who set
up factories to take advantage of tax holidays and lack of labor or
environmental laws, the profits are a disincentive to creating
protections for the young women.
Within this context, cross-border organizing for social and
environmental justice along the U.S.-Mexican border region can be
understood as an international counter-politics that contests
mainstream definitions of political sovereignty. In addressing the
transnational conditions of globalization, in which labor exploitation
is deepened and eased by product design in one location, assembly in
another, marketing and sales in yet another—the innovation of
cross-border organizing is that it is likewise "transnational," a
"politics" not aimed exclusively at rights within the nation-state. In
creating a public discourse about industrial accountability for
environmental health and safety, transnational feminist advocacy
networks explicitly target the Mexican and U.S. states' collusion with
the industries that expose workers to lethal chemicals and pollutants,
and declare that those states exploit women and children at the border,
as not merely instruments of labor, but as disposable life.
Cross-border organizing to counter the deadly conditions for border
communities constitutes a new form of political activism in light of the
declining legitimacy of both the U.S. and Mexican national governments.
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