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Narratives of Vulnerability in Mexico’s War on Drugs Raúl Diego Rivera Hernández Translated by Isis Sadek Narratives of Vulnerability in Mexico’s War on Drugs “NarrativesofVulnerabilityinMexico’sWaronDrugs standsapartfromarecent wave of academic books on organized crime and anti-drug policy by exploring the often-overlooked potential for political engagement and resistance of those most vulnerable to the country’s unprecedented violence: migrants, journalists and activists. Through a convincing multidisciplinary examination of literary works, journalistic chronicles and documentary film, Diego Rivera Hernández goes beyond the reiterative approaches to ‘narcoculture’ and its mythology of ‘cartels,’‘jefes’and‘sicarios.’Instead,hisbookshedslightonempoweredvictims thatbecomepoliticalsubjectsastheyconfrontthecomplexcrisisofhumanrights framedbythemilitarizationoftheshared‘nationalsecurity’agendapropelledby boththeU.S.andMexicangovernments.Thisisathoughtfulinvestigationabout the ability of courageous people to reject reductive narratives of victimization andcounteractthehorrorsofstateviolence,transnationalcrimeandprecarityby mobilizing to enact social change and seek transitional justice.” —Oswaldo Zavala, Professor of Latin American literature and culture at the City University of New York, USA, author of Los cárteles no existen. Narcotráfico y cultura en México “In Narratives of Vulnerability in Mexico’s War on Drugs, Raúl Diego Rivera Hernández explores alternative ways of articulating the dominant narratives of the ‘War on Drugs’ promulgated by the United States in the early 1970s that unleashed violence both on Afro-Americans in the U.S. and on communities throughout Latin America. By focusing on the ongoing migrations, disappear- ances, and human rights violations precipitated by the ongoing ‘war’ that covers for rapacious neoliberalism, this book tells another, necessary story. Beautifully writtenandmeticulouslyresearched,thisisessentialreadingforthoseconcerned with the urgent issues of hemispheric migration and human rights.” —Diana Taylor, Professor of Performance Studies and Spanish, New York University, USA Raúl Diego Rivera Hernández Narratives of Vulnerability in Mexico’s War on Drugs Raúl Diego Rivera Hernández Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Villanova University Villanova, PA, USA Translated by Isis Sadek Ottawa, ON, Canada ISBN 978-3-030-51143-2 ISBN 978-3-030-51144-9 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51144-9 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval,electronicadaptation,computersoftware,orbysimilarordissimilarmethodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such namesareexemptfromtherelevantprotectivelawsandregulationsandthereforefreefor general use. Thepublisher,theauthorsandtheeditorsaresafetoassumethattheadviceandinforma- tion in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respecttothematerialcontainedhereinorforanyerrorsoromissionsthatmayhavebeen made.Thepublisherremainsneutralwithregardtojurisdictionalclaimsinpublishedmaps and institutional affiliations. Photo credit: Prometeo Rodríguez Lucero. Used with permission. This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland Para mi pequeña Luisa, este libro sobre un México en resistencia que también es tuyo. Acknowledgments In preparing Narratives of Vulnerability, the affection, patience, and support of Barbora Pˇríhodová have played a vital role from the moment when I began to imagine this book and at every step since. She knows best how hard it has been to get to this point. Thank you, mi amor, for your endless encouragement. I thank my parents Adriana and Raúl, and my brother Rodrigo, for their presence in my life, which has been constant despite the many miles between us. They are a wonderful tribe and have motivated me to finish this project. My gratitude to Isis Sadek for her outstanding work in translating the manuscriptasIwaswritingitandhersubsequenteditsandcomments.In addition to being a brilliant scholar, I am lucky to have her as my friend and colleague. I am grateful to my colleague Manuel Gutiérrez Silva for his critical reading of the manuscript and his perceptive observations. My thanks to Shaun Vigil for his interest in and enthusiasm for the initial manuscript proposal. Throughout the process of writing this manuscript,Ihavealsobenefittedconsiderablyfromtheincisivefeedback that the external evaluators provided. Thank you to the team at Palgrave, especially Camille Davis, Liam McLean, and Ashwini Elango, who brought this book into the world. I am indebted to Daniela Rea for introducing me to the extraordi- nary team of Pie de Página and to some of the members of Periodistas vii viii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS de a Pie who worked on the documentary series Buscadores en un país dedesaparecidos.ConsueloMoralesPagaza,PrometeoRodríguezLucero, XimenaNatera,DanielaPastrana,JoséIgnacioDeAlba,andÉrikaLozano are highly skilled journalists and photographers tirelessly engaged in the struggle for human rights. My gratitude and admiration to activists and writers Rubén Figueroa, Marta Sánchez Soler, Alejandro Vélez Salas, and John Gibler for what I have learned from them along the path. Finally, I thank Vilanova University’s subvention of publication program for the funding that allowed me to pay for the rights to use the images reproduced in this book. Contents 1 Introduction. Vulnerability and Victimhood in Mexico’s War on Drugs: A Human Rights Crisis 1 2 Vulnerabilities and Resistances in Transit: Narratives of Central American Colonial Transmigrants 27 3 “Nos están matando!”: Professional Reflexivity on Violence Against Mexican Journalists in Contemporary Chronicles 83 4 Dissident Mourners: Victims’ Political Participation in Human Rights Activism 133 5 Conclusion 191 Index 201 ix List of Figures Fig. 4.1 Mario Vergara’s outfit is adapted to the typical conditions of the searches of disappeared people in Iguala (Photo by Prometeo Rodríguez Lucero) 168 Fig. 4.2 Forensic tools and equipment owned by Mario Vergara. The photo of his brother and the text of the General Victims’ Law is at the center of the shot. On the right, t-shirts identifying him as a searcher (Photo by Consuelo Morales Pagaza) 169 Fig. 4.3 MarioVergaraandthemembersofTheOtherDisappeared Persons of Iguala conduct exhumations (Photo by Prometeo Rodríguez Lucero) 170 Fig. 4.4 Graciela Pérez Rodríguez explaining the objectives of CFC to the relative of a disappeared person (Photoby Consuelo Morales Pagaza) 172 Fig. 4.5 GracielaPérezRodríguezcollectsaDNAsampletoidentify disappeared persons as part of her work with CFC (Photo by Consuelo Morales Pagaza) 173 Fig. 4.6 Sample collection system for citizen-led DNA analysis (Photo by Consuelo Morales Pagaza) 174 Fig. 4.7 Plaza de los desaparecidos in Monterrey, Mexico (Photo by Diana Guadalupe Martínez Gálvez) 178 Fig. 4.8 Leticia Hidalgo and an embroidery that seeks to make the absent visible (Photo by Érika Lozano González) 179 xi CHAPTER 1 Introduction. Vulnerability and Victimhood in Mexico’s War on Drugs: A Human Rights Crisis This book originates from a political urgency to understand the current humanrightscrisisthathasbeencausedbytheWaronDrugsinMexico. I study this crisis by focusing on three vulnerable populations that have felt the blunt impact of the War on Drugs: Central American migrants in transittotheUnitedStatesofAmerica(Chapter2),journalistswhoreport on violence in highly dangerous regions (Chapter 3), and the mourning relatives of victims of severe crimes, who take collective action by partici- patinginhumanrightsinvestigationsandsearchingfortheirmissingloved ones (Chapter 4). I discuss these communities by reading contempo- rarynovels,journalisticchronicles,testimonialworks,anddocumentaries. Theseanalysesbringtolighthowallthesefictionalandnonfictionalrepre- sentations engage with vulnerable social groups affected by the violence wrought by the War on Drugs. They also capture the unique conditions of each of these communities, portraying their migratory status, profes- sional activity, and the reasons why they decided to embrace as their own responsibilities that the state should and could not fulfill. Violence againstmigrants,journalists,andactivistsrevealsanarrayofhumanrights violations affecting the right to safe transit across borders, freedom of expressionandtherighttoinformation,andtherighttotruthandjustice. The three case studies in this book are part of a deeper and broader human rights crisis. In Mexico, this crisis is further aggravated by other forms of violence: internal displacement, the expansion of feminicidal © The Author(s) 2020 1 R.DiegoRivera Hernández,NarrativesofVulnerabilityinMexico’sWar on Drugs, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51144-9_1

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