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Mapping Detention and Toxicity

Submitted by M. Liliana Ramirez on
Description

As an anthropologist interested in the ways that undocumented immigrants experience structures of state power, I am using this project to explore the ways in which the Adelanto Detention Center located in the high desert in California is used as tool for incarcerality, deportation and violations of human rights. While the facility was previously used as a state prison since 1991, it was later bought by the city of Adelanto and then expanded into an immigration detention center that holds up to 2,000 detainees in 2011. Adelanto is also neighbor to Victorville, California which held the George Air Force Base between 1942-1992. While the air force base has been closed since then, the site has been exposed for its use of harmful pollutants and burials of radioactive waste that have the potential to pollute water in the area. Finally, this project aims to map out connections between the use regions previous use of the George Air Force Base and the current use of the Adelanto Detention Center. Given the proximity of the two, this project also aims to investigate if the toxic waste and pollutants from the air force base have any health implication to the city of Adelanto and to the Adelanto detention center. My visualization tools for this project will include photographs of the outside of  both facilities and a collection of maps. I will place more emphasis on the maps given that google maps is not able to generate a route that connects the Adelanto Detention Center with the George Air Force Base.

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