Unequal Neighbors: Place Stigma and the Making of a Local Border

Kristen Hill Maher (Associate Professor of Political Science, Associate Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University),David Carruthers (Professor of Political Science, Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University)

Unequal Neighbors: Place Stigma and the Making of a Local Border
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Country
United States
Published
28 May 2021
Pages
368
ISBN
9780197557198

Unequal Neighbors: Place Stigma and the Making of a Local Border

Kristen Hill Maher (Associate Professor of Political Science, Associate Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University),David Carruthers (Professor of Political Science, Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University)

San Diego and Tijuana are the site of a national border enforcement spectacle, but they are also neighboring cities with deeply intertwined histories, cultures, and economies. In Unequal Neighbors, Kristen Hill Maher and David Carruthers shift attention from the national border to a local one, examining the role of place stigma in reinforcing actual and imagined inequalities between these cities. Widespread bordered imaginaries in San Diego represent it as a place of economic vitality, safety, and order, while stigmatizing Tijuana as a zone of poverty, crime, and corruption. These dualisms misrepresent complex realities on the ground, but they also have real material effects: the vision of a local border benefits some actors in the region while undermining others.

Based on a wide range of original empirical materials, the book examines how asymmetries between these cities have been produced and reinforced through stigmatizing representations of Tijuana in media, everyday talk, economic relations, and local tourism discourse and practices. However, both place stigma and borders are subject to contestation, and the book also examines debordering practices and counter-narratives about Tijuana’s image. While the details of the book are particular to this corner of the world, the kinds of processes it documents offer a window into the making of unequal neighbors more broadly. The dynamics at the Tijuana border present a framework for understanding how inequalities that manifest in cultural practices produce asymmetric borders between places.

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