"Living Is for Everyone": Border Crossings for Community, Environment, and Health

Title"Living Is for Everyone": Border Crossings for Community, Environment, and Health
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsDi Chiro, Giovanna
JournalOsiris
Volume19
IssueArticleType: research-article / Issue Title: Landscapes of Exposure: Knowledge and Illness in Modern Environments / Full publica
Pagination112-129
ISSN0369-7827
AbstractThis article examines the transnational networking practices of Teresa Leal, an environmental justice activist living and working on the U.S.-Mexico border. It shows, through the method of engaged ethnography, how she and other community activists respond to the effects of global economic restructuring policies such as NAFTA. Grounded in an ecological epistemology, Leal blends "local" and "scientific" knowledges about the deteriorating health, economic, and environmental conditions at the border and constructs a "global sense of place" that brings into focus the everyday realities of neoliberal globalization. The article documents a daylong "toxic tour" of the Ambos Nogales region and highlights the multiple border crossings (epistemic, geographic, political, cultural) undertaken by Leal, other activists, and the author, a visitor to the region, to narrate a history of community health and environmental action in a transnational context.
URLhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/3655235
Short Title"Living Is for Everyone"
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