Migrant flows and necro-sovereignty: the itineraries of bodies, samples, and data across the US-Mexico borderlands

Contributors

Contributed date

August 26, 2019 - 7:29pm

Critical Commentary

Through an ethnographic examination of the tension between the practice and politics of mobility, this article examines the movement of bodies as scientific objects and sociopolitical signposts for both sovereignty and identity. In particular, we explore the following paradox: living migrants are seen as dangerous bodies and political threats while dead bodies, specifically, the objects and data generated from their remains make multiple, socially valued migrations across the political space of the border. We argue that scientific objects flow because these objects, not the people, become the currency of necro-sovereignty, a nationalistic currency premised on death and exercised via appeals to human identification as a form of family reunification and the return of bodies-out-of-place to their ‘correct’ locations. Exploration of this paradox also shows that although individuation is the key goal of forensic science, collective identities, including race, class, gender, and nationality, become obligatory passage points in the path toward individuation.

Source

BioSocieties

Language

English

Cite as

Vivette García-Deister & Lindsay A. Smith, "Migrant flows and necro-sovereignty: the itineraries of bodies, samples, and data across the US-Mexico borderlands", contributed by Vivette Garcia-Deister, STS Infrastructures, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 26 August 2019, accessed 17 December 2024. https://stsinfrastructures.org/content/migrant-flows-and-necro-sovereignty-itineraries-bodies-samples-and-data-across-us-mexico