We are a station for social, ecological, and artistic research located in the borderlands of the Sonoran Desert. We are driven by a deep respect for the life that thrives in arid lands, and by a long-standing rootedness in rural border communities. Our work seeks to recover and dignify the ecological and cultural memory of the region, and to help imagine alternatives to devastation and violence.
Altar Research Center is located on the outskirts of the town of Altar, the seat of a municipality that shares a 100-kilometer border with the Tohono O’odham Nation in Arizona. In this region—seemingly remote and sparsely populated—there exists a long-standing tradition of cross-border exchange and relations.
When the United States adopted a strategy of pushing migrants toward the most dangerous areas of the desert, the town of Altar became the last stop for thousands of people from southern Mexico and Central America. The historical development of a continuum of legal and illegal economies in the region is inseparable from its location just south of the most unequal international border in the world.
This has led to the emergence of new forms of domination—where state institutions and organized crime become intertwined—challenging traditional categories of analysis. Altar is thus a privileged site from which to observe and reflect on the contemporary convergence of border inequality, militarization, and ecological devastation.
Natalia Mendoza
Co-Director
Miguel Fernández de Castro
Co-Director