Arid Borders: Transatlantic Dialogues on Mobility and Smuggling explores the dry and politically tense landscapes where human mobility collides with border control regimes. Through a comparative and transatlantic lens, this project examines how smuggling practices and migratory routes in arid zones — from the Sonoran Desert to North Africa — reveal networks of solidarity, survival, and resistance. Far from being mere corridors of passage, these borderlands emerge as territories of cultural, economic, and political negotiation, where marginalized voices rewrite dominant narratives of control and illegality.
Program
04.23.2025
From Transit to Containment: Libya as Europe’s Experimental Border Zone
Luigi Achilli
Contemporary (In)mobility: Policies, Violence, and Waiting
Nohora Niño, Gabriela García & Francisco Landeros
How “Felt Externalisation” Transformed Everyday Life in the Tunisian Borderlands
Ahlam Chemlali
04.24.2025
Smuggling of Licit Merchandise at the U.S.-Mexico Border: From “Peaceful” to Cartel and Military-Controlled Operations
Efren Sandoval
Borderlands as Spaces of Possibility
Gabriella Sanchez
Dis/appearance in Tijuana
Rihan Yeh
Two Photographs for One Border: Regimes of Visuality at North Africa’s Borders
Myriam Amri
Grammar of Gates / La Sombra de la Tierra
Miguel Fernández de Castro
04.25.2025
Sacred Smuggling: The Sanctuary Movement of the 1980s
Caroline Tracey
Moving In and Out of the Stream: Latin American Trajectories of Africans On-The-Move
Jonathan Echeverri
Borders on the Loose: How the Sahara Has Turned into a Borderland
Julien Brachet
The Intertwined Spatial Logics of Smuggling and War
Natalia Mendoza