featured essay

Borderlands: A Photographer Explores Illegal Immigration in His Arizona Backyard


By Phil Nesmith, Guest Writer, 1-16-07

  illegal immigration arizona border
  A group of 30 illegal border crossers get caught by the Border Patrol near Cobre Ridge, 23 miles west of Nogales, Arizona. See the full photo essay here

Illegal immigration, an issue that has periodically made its way into national news, became a national center-ring spectacle in the run-up to the 2006 elections. As someone who has lived within 10 miles of the Arizona/Mexico border for the past decade, I have witnessed the front line of an issue the rest of the country thought was something new. The environmental damage, the traffic accidents that kill dozens, the abandoned bales of marijuana on hiking trails, stolen vehicles, the discovery of the abandoned dead, and the persistent presence of Border Patrol vehicles and aircraft are a way of life here.

While the situation had become "normal" for me, the ever-increasing news reports from my area of Arizona made me aware that I was living in a special place under special circumstances. As the border became a place more people saw on the news, I focused on the images chosen to represent the situation. I often thought that the images lacked the vision of someone who lived here, and I felt the need to take my cameras into my own “backyard” and capture images that said more.

Click here to view the Borderlands slideshow.

Every weekend, and sometimes in the afternoon after my day job, I would point my Jeep toward the borderlands. Over several months I would travel more than 3,000 miles along remote, rough border roads, as well as hike smuggling trails seeking out what was happening in this part of the country.

As the weeks passed, the images slowly began to accumulate: the Border Patrol chasing endless waves of crossers, apprehensions, helicopters darting over grand landscapes, and the artifacts left behind by the desert ghosts heading north from Mexico. I would participate in pursuit and tracking operations with the Border Patrol and talk to border crossers I found on my own. These crossers often asked me for directions to Phoenix, more than 150 miles away, and seeing they had no water, I would give them what I had. Never once did I photograph these crossers, out of respect for their monumental journey and the danger in which they had placed themselves. Only after they had been apprehended by the Border Patrol, and with their permission, did I ever make an image of a crosser. I do not support how they come into this country, but when you look into the eyes of a man or woman risking death for a better life, you realize that we are all human.

As I look through the images I have created, I see a body of work that is both intimate and distant. After studying my results, I have come to love the fact that although I have shown so much, so much more remains hidden. To me, this reflects the complexity of the situation and the difficulty of the solutions. The dynamics of cause and effect, political goals and shortfalls, policy creation and enforcement, and human desire are endless...and thus, so is my creation of images from the southern deserts of Arizona.

Click here to view the Borderlands slideshow.


Phil Nesmith is a photographer currently based in southern Arizona. His work focuses on the creation of visual narratives, and he has worked on stories from the U.S. to Iraq and Bosnia. His recent projects have turned towards the art of traditional photographic processes, in particular the use of wet plate and dry plate tintype processing, as well as mixing digital and traditional processes. Some of his work can be seen on his FLICKR photostream.



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