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[Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 2011, vol. 36, no. 3]
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M e l i s s a W . W r i g h t
Necropolitics, Narcopolitics, and Femicide: Gendered
Violence on the Mexico-U.S. Border
What place is given to life, death, and the human body (in particular the
wounded or slain body)? How are they inscribed in the order of power?
—Achille Mbembe (2003, 12)
I
n 1993, a group of women shocked Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, with the
news that dozens of girls and women had been murdered and dumped,
like garbage, around the city during the year. As the numbers of mur-
ders grew over the years, and as the police forces proved unable and
unwilling to find the perpetrators, the protestors became activists. They
called the violence and consequent impunity for the crimes “femicide,”
and they demanded that the Mexican government, at the local, state, and
federal levels, stop the violence and prosecute the murderers.
Nearly two decades later, the city’s infamy as a place of femicide is
giving way to another terrible reputation, now as a place of unprecedented
drug violence. Since 2006, more than six thousand people have died in
the city, and more than twenty-eight thousand across the country, in
relation to the violence associated with the restructuring of the cartels
that control the production and distribution of illegal drugs across Mexico.
As with the femicides, the principal targets of the violence associated with
I benefited from the generosity of many people during the research and writing of this
article: Esther Chávez Cano, Irma Campos Madrigal, Luz Estela Castro, Alma Gómez,
Rosalba Robles, and others in Chihuahua City and in Ciudad Juárez who answered my
questions and tried to help me understand things more clearly. Rosalba Robles, Guadalupe
de Anda, Lorraine Dowler, Brian King, James McCarthy, and the anonymous reviewers
offered valuable comments on earlier drafts. Molly Molloy offers an invaluable service of
border news synthesis, translation, and dissemination through the Frontera-list, which I have
relied upon for years. I am especially grateful to Linda Garber, whose expert editing made
all the difference. I am solely responsible for any errors. I would like to dedicate this article
to Esther Chávez Cano and to Irma Campos Madrigal, both courageous and shameless
feminists. They are missed by many.
708 ❙ Wright
the drug trade come from the city’s working poor, whose productive labor
established Ciudad Juárez’s reputation as a profitable hub of global in-
dustrialization in the era of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA).
In response to the public outcry against the violence, the Mexican
government has deployed thousands of troops to numerous cities, Ciudad
Juárez being prominent among them, as part of a military strategy to
secure the state against the cartels. The violence has worsened under the
army’s presence, however, with the city becoming one of the most violent
in the world (Mora 2009; Miglierini 2010). Moreover, domestic and
international human rights organizations have documented record-break-
ing numbers of human and civil rights violations on the part of Mexican
federal forces (LaFranchi 2009; Human Rights Watch 2010). As a result,
the Mexican federal government is facing a political crisis as debates ensue
over the meaning of the violence for the viability of the Mexican state.
On one side, growing numbers of people are declaring that the violence
represents, as the noted Mexican historian Vı́ctor Orozco (2009) has
written, “a failure of state.” On the other, supporters of the president and
his governing coalition claim that the violence demonstrates the state’s
success in disrupting the drug trade, such that the increase in violence
directly reflects an increase in state power (Wilkinson 2008). These debates
reveal how, as the Mexican public scholar, activist, and Chihuahua leg-
islator Victor Quintana (2010) has recently written, “a war of interpre-
tations” is central to the state’s response to the violence, an argument
first made (as he notes) by the antifemicide activists who called the gov-
ernment’s response to the femicides tantamount to a war against civil
society (Wright 2006, 151–70). At the heart of such wars lies the question,
Do the dead bodies in Ciudad Juárez’s streets indicate a failing state, as
the activists argue, or a stronger one, as the government contends? To
address that question, I argue that the politics over the meaning of the
drug-related murders and femicide must be understood in relation to
gendered violence and its use as a tool for securing the state.
To that end, I examine the wars over the interpretation of death in
northern Mexico through the concept of necropolitics as elaborated by
the postcolonial scholar Achille Mbembe. Mbembe defines necropolitics
to be politics as a “work of death” (2003, 12), which he presents as a
corrective complement to Michel Foucault’s widely used idea of biopolitics
(Mbembe 2002). Foucault argues that modern liberal governance differed
from previous absolutist versions in that it controlled the population not
through the threat of death but through techniques for controlling living
populations. Biopolitics, he writes, consists of “numerous and diverse
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 709
techniques for achieving the subjugations of bodies and the control of
populations” (Foucault 1979, 140). The justification for modern gov-
ernments, he continues, rests on the reproduction of living subjects. While
using Foucault’s argument as a point of departure, Mbembe argues that
biopolitics is not sufficient for explaining how the threat of violent death
continues to prevail as a technique of governance in contemporary set-
tings, and he challenges Foucault’s reliance on Western European ex-
amples to develop his theory of the kinship binding the production of
states to the reproduction of their subjects. Mbembe instead draws ex-
amples from the more politically volatile states of the postcolonial context
to insist that they provide insights through which we can understand
politics as a form of war in which the sovereign emerges through the
determination of who dies or who does not die and, therefore, lives.
Mbembe, however, employs Foucault’s analysis to turn attention to how
the meaning of death in necropolitics, like the meaning of life in bio-
politics, emerges through interpretations of embodiment—of corpses, of
who kills, and of who is targeted for death. Biopolitics is intimately wound
into necropolitics, since governments protect the lives of some by justi-
fying the deaths of others (Braidotti 2007). Thus, he argues, addressing
“the relationship between politics and death” is essential for understand-
ing how states emerge through the reproduction of death, including its
meaning and representation, as the counterpart to life (Mbembe 2003,
16 ).1
With this concept of necropolitics in mind, I examine how the wars
over the political meaning of death in relation both to femicide and to
the events called drug violence unfold through a gendering of space, of
violence, and of subjectivity. My objective is twofold: first, to demonstrate
how the antifemicide movement illustrates the stakes for a democratic
Mexican state and its citizens while governing elites argue that the violence
devastating Ciudad Juárez is a positive outcome of the government’s war
against organized crime; and second, to show how a politics of gender is
central to this kind of necropolitics. I am not the first feminist theorist
to point out that gender politics are foundational not only to the formation
of the liberal democratic institutions that emerged out of the destruction
1 This question reflects Mbembe’s dialogue with the work of Giorgio Agamben, who
poses that question in relation to the state of exception. Mbembe, however, does not regard
the politics of death as presenting an exception but rather as the dominant social configuration
in states that operate under conditions of emergency, as in martial law imposed by civilian
governments or as in the crisis declared right now in Mexico. Both authors reveal in their
analyses a debt to F. W. J. Schelling’s idea of the “living dead” as subjects who never realize
their full potential while living under the politics of death (Žižek 2004, 23).
710 ❙ Wright
of absolutist states but also to the organization of states as the legitimate
arbiters of violence (Landes 1988; Melzer and Rabine 1992; McMillan
2009). For instance, as historian Joan Landes has written, “a pervasive
gendering of the public sphere” operates as a “mechanism of violence”
for defining and controlling the modern liberal subject around the exclu-
sion of “the feminine” from the public sphere of politics, economy, and
culture (1988, 2). Gender, in other words, is central to the violent dy-
namics linking the production of states to the reproduction of their sub-
jects. As the proliferation of gendered violence around the world indicates,
this kind of violence is constitutive of necropolitics: the politics of death
and the politics of gender go hand in hand (United Nations 2006). As
the antifemicide movement clearly demonstrates, however, the neglect of
gender so prevalent in discussions such as Mbembe’s limits the political
possibilities for subverting the relations of power reproduced through
gendered necropolitics as people encounter the violence of gender in their
daily lives (Ahmetbeyzade 2008).2
The relevance of these issues for contemporary Mexico and for the
governance of its shared border with its northern neighbor has surfaced
repeatedly in my research into the antifemicide movement in Ciudad
Juárez over the past twelve years and, more recently, in my studies of the
experience of state-sponsored militarization along the Mexico-U.S. bor-
der. Several authors have published extensively on the antifemicide move-
ment.3 However, no work to date has analyzed the movement in relation
to the challenges for organizing against the government’s response, or
lack of response, to what is commonly called drug violence. Drawing on
interviews I conducted with political, corporate, and activist leaders, as
well as on ethnographic material collected in 2004, I present a discourse
analysis arguing that the connections between the two antiviolence move-
ments are essential to understanding and confronting the violence that
the movements combat. Because of the present escalation of violence and
attacks against scholars, activists, and civic leaders in Ciudad Juárez, I have
taken extra precautions to hide the identities of some key informants.
Many Mexican journalists are no longer signing their own articles, and
many scholars are refusing to publish their findings for fear of violent
2 Jasbir K. Puar’s (2007) interrogation of the U.S. politics of terrorism at the intersection
of queer, feminist, and postcolonial studies has also advanced the discussion of Mbembe’s
necropolitics and Agamben’s state of exception.
3 Feminist analyses of femicide in Juárez began appearing in 1999 (Benı́tez et al. 1999;
Nathan 1999; Wright 1999; Fregoso 2000; Monárrez Fragoso 2000, 2001) and inaugurated
scholarship that has had palpable impact on the activist movement (see Wright 2001; Fregoso
2003; Tabuenca Cordoba 2003b; Schmidt Camacho 2005, among others).
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 711
reprisal (Castillo 2010).4 For this reason, the analysis here also relies
more heavily on newspaper accounts for interview material than is usual
in my work. A study of the necropolitics of gendered violence could not
be more timely, as the activists and scholars struggling against governing
justifications for the deaths in northern Mexico find their own lives in
danger.
The gendered politics of “getting what they asked for”
I explore the mechanisms of violence . . . and the silencing of public
women.—Joan Landes (1988, 2)
In 1994, one year after the news broke that women and girls were being
hunted down in Ciudad Juárez, a group of women formed a new group
called La Coordinadora de Organizaciones No Gubernamentales en Pro
de la Mujer (the coalition of nongovernmental organizations for women,
hereafter “the coalition”). The participating organizations, eventually
numbering fourteen, had emerged during the previous decade in response
to the problems of a city dealing with rapid industrialization and migration
that saw the proliferation of squatter settlements, single-headed house-
holds, domestic violence, children at risk, and public health and educa-
tional shortfalls. One of the original creators of the coalition, Esther Chá-
vez Cano, a retired accountant and feminist activist, described the
organization as “a unique political force” in the city: the political estab-
lishment “had never imagined that [women] could have that kind of
impact on public politics. We shocked them!”5
While only one participating organization, Chávez Cano’s El 8 de
Marzo de Ciudad Juárez, was an explicitly feminist group, the coalition
created a feminist tone in its justice demands, which centered around
three principal ideas: that the city government and the city’s export-pro-
cessing firms implement strategies for preventing further deaths and kid-
nappings, that the Chihuahua state conduct competent investigations into
4 Numerous organizations monitor the deteriorating situation for journalists, scholars,
and activists in the country. See, e.g., Frontera NorteSur at http://www.nmsu.edu/f̃rontera
and the Justice in Mexico Project at http://www.justiceinmexico.org. I have had several
conversations with scholars from two of the public universities in Ciudad Juárez over their
decision not to publish findings critical of the government since 2007.
5 My interview with Esther Chávez Cano, conducted in her home, February 2007;
translation mine.
712 ❙ Wright
the crimes already committed, and that governing elites at all levels address
the cultural, political, and economic context that justified violence against
women and that established the conditions for murdering them with im-
punity (Pérez Garcı́a 1999.)
In communicating these demands, the coalition made connections be-
tween the violence and the political economy of export processing that
had been the engine of growth along Mexico’s northern border and that
had laid the path for the implementation of NAFTA in 1994. The coalition
called for better policing and for lighting along the dark roads that women
and girls had to walk as they commuted to their jobs in the city’s export-
processing industries, or maquiladoras. They urged employers to provide
livable wages and safe transportation for the workers, and they demanded
that violence against women be taken seriously at the municipal and state
levels of governance. As the director of an organization working with sex
workers and HIV education told me in a 1997 interview, “They did not
want to see the politics behind the violence. That’s what we made them
see.”6
To generate force behind their demands, the antifemicide protestors
created national and international networks that brought attention to the
violence and made Ciudad Juárez notorious for the murders of the same
young women whose work had attracted attention to the feminization of
the international division of labor. As a result, domestic and international
political and consumer organizations pressured the political leaders of
Mexico as well as the leaders of international corporations doing business
in the country to stop the femicide.
Political and corporate elites resisted the idea that the violence repre-
sented a political or economic problem, and they answered the coalition’s
charges by claiming that the victims were not worthy of so much attention.
As Chihuahua Governor Francisco Barrio put it in 1995, the murder
numbers fell within normal ranges for the city (Diebel 1997).7 His as-
sertion rested on the city’s reputation, forged during the years of U.S.
Prohibition, as a working-class city of vice and cultural contamination,
reflective of its proximity to a powerful northern neighbor with its loose
sexual mores and military men looking for cheap sex and alcohol, among
other tawdry entertainments (Tabuenca Córdoba 1995–96). Unlike other
6 Interview, Ciudad Juárez, 1997.
7 The controversy over his dismissal of the murders has been recently renewed with
Barrio’s 2009 appointment as the Mexican ambassador to Canada. Antifemicide activists
along with other rights organizations in Canada protested his appointment and brought
further scrutiny of his role in the violence and the surrounding impunity during the 1990s.
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 713
cities, Ciudad Juárez did not confine prostitution (legal in Mexico) to
particular zonas de tolerancia but instead allowed it to flourish anywhere
in the city. The city was famous for the women in its public streets, squares,
and markets, who sold sex as “public women.”8
This reputation solidified during the 1970s as young women started
migrating by the thousands to find work in the industries hiring female
workers. The public association of obrera (worker) with ramera (whore)
was something that factory workers faced constantly, as women who
walked the streets on their way to work and women who walked the
streets as part of their work added to the city’s fame as a city of public
women (see, e.g., Nathan 2002). Often portrayed as evidence of the social
disintegration of the Mexican family, factory workers were the very people
responsible for Mexico’s reputation as a hub of global manufacturing. But
since the workers behind this fame were public women, rather than private
ones with their virtue intact, the city’s proud industrial reputation was
constantly joined with the shame that it was built by women who worked
outside the home (Tabuenca Córdoba 1995–96). The characterization of
obreras as typifying a kind of public woman relies on a negative interpre-
tation of prostitution as emblematic of women who are contaminated by
their activities in the public sphere and who, in turn, contaminate their
families, communities, and nations (Castillo, Rangel Gómez, and Delgado
1999). The political stakes of such a characterization are even more ap-
parent when contrasted to the term “public man,” which in Mexico is
another way of saying “citizen.”9 Taken to its logical extreme, the gov-
ernment’s public woman discourse explains that, while unfortunate, the
deaths of public women represent a kind of public cleansing, as the removal
of troublesome women restores the moral and political balance of society
(Wright 1999; Fregoso and Bejarano 2010).
This fame of the city’s public women was the subcontext to the gov-
ernor’s words when he declared that the murdering and dumping of
dozens of young women and girls across the city was normal for a city
like Ciudad Juárez (Tabuenca Córdoba 2003a). He assured Mexican fam-
ilies that there was nothing to fear as long as they knew where their female
family members were. The discourse of the public woman normalized the
violence and used the victims’ bodies as a way to substantiate the politics
8 For a fuller discussion of common discourses regarding cultural contamination and sex
workers in Mexican border cities, see Castillo, Rangel Gómez, and Delgado (1999) and
Wright (2006).
9 I would like to thank Socorro Tabuenca Córdoba for pointing out this linguistic dis-
tinction to me.
714 ❙ Wright
based on patriarchal notions of normality. Normal Mexican families, with
normal, private women safely at home, had nothing to worry about.
The police reiterated this idea when they told worried families and
friends of women and girls who had gone missing that they most likely
lived “double lives” (Nathan 1999, 26; Wright 1999, 456). They repeated
the message to the grieving friends and families after bodies had been
found. Rather than respond to the violence with professional investigations
to find the criminals and stop the violence, they told friends and families
that there was nothing they could do. Girls who live double lives often
end up dead; that was a normal chain of events, so the lack of investigations
and convictions was not a problem given that there was not anything
wrong with the violence (Amnesty International 2003). Chávez Cano,
who accompanied many of the family members to meet with police and
demand police action, summed up the attitude: “The police say the dead
women and girls were hookers, or that they were heroin-users. Their whole
point is that it’s somehow the fault of these girls. . . . We are supposed
to believe these women are responsible for their own deaths” (quoted in
Diebel 1997, A1).
As the number of corpses grew, the brutality of the crimes and the lack
of convictions became political issues in the city and the general public
began to demand answers. As one of the students in my economic ge-
ography course at one of the city’s public universities declared one day
in 1996, “You could get arrested faster for stealing a car than for killing
a girl!” The mayor’s office addressed mounting public concerns by taking
out a series of announcements in the city’s newspapers in 1995, which
cautioned female residents to avoid being inappropriately public, wearing
provocative clothing, and frequenting dangerous public places (Tabuenca
Córdoba 2003a). The governing authorities also urged families to keep
track of their female members’ whereabouts, so as to discourage them
from leading double lives, as workers or students by day and prostitutes
by night (Limas Hernández 1998). As one United Nations commission
reported, the impression created by the state and local government’s re-
sponse was that the victims “were looking to be murdered” (United
Nations 1999, item 85; translation mine).
Beyond simply explaining the violence as inevitable and normal in a
city of public women, political and corporate elites used this discourse as
a way to weaken public sympathy for the victims of the violence and
thereby to dilute the public pressure to prioritize women’s safety. In claim-
ing that the victims were public women who actually caused the violence
that ended their lives, they refered to a line of argument that in its extreme
actually justifies the violence against women as a way to rid society of
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 715
trouble. If a public woman is the source of the violence, then her murder
provides a means for ending it. Her removal performs a kind of urban
cleansing. The public woman discourse, in short, was a key tool for po-
sitioning the dead women and girls in the political order; it was a pillar
of the necropolitics demonstrating that the publicness of the victims, as
evidenced by the corpses’ location in public places and the mutilations of
their raped bodies, caused the violence that was disrupting the social and
political peace of northern Mexico.10
The coalition fought the government’s gendered necropolitics by chal-
lenging the discourse of the public woman and the violent gendering of
space that justified the murders as evidence of a normal life, by person-
alizing the victims and introducing them to the public as daughters (hijas).
The move drew on other social movements in Mexico and Latin America
in which activists, many of them mothers, fought against repressive states
that used violent tactics to quash social protest. By referring to the victims
of violence as innocent children, activists throughout Latin America had
countered prevailing state discourses of them as communists, terrorists,
or subversives. The coalition used this tactic as a way to fight against the
public woman discourse, not by fully dismantling it but by rejecting the
idea that buenas hijas (good daughters) did not have a legitimate place
in the city’s public sphere, on its streets, and in its factories (Wright 2007).
The victims were fulfilling their family duties by working outside of the
home to provide for their families. “We knew we had to do something
when they just laughed at us for demanding investigations,” Chávez said
in 2007. “So we introduced the victims to the public. We showed them
to be human beings.”11
With this strategy, the activists flipped the sexist discourse of public
women on its head by declaring that the victims were in public space for
private reasons: they were augmenting their family income by working
outside of the home. Therefore, the violence that threatened these
“daughters” was a violence that threatened the very foundation of Mexican
society: the patriarchal family that taught its daughters to put family ob-
ligation first, even if that meant working outside the home. In this way,
the activists fought against the necropolitics justifying femicide as a logical
outcome of dangerous female sexuality that makes violent men out of
otherwise peaceful ones. The activists countered the discourse by declaring
that the victims represented the very core of Mexican society. The violence,
in short, indicated a weak state.
10 See Nathan (1999), Fregoso (2003), Schmidt Camacho (2005), and Wright (2006).
11 Interview with Esther Chávez Cano, at her home in Ciudad Juárez, February 2007.
716 ❙ Wright
Through their defiance of the authorities’ necropolitics, the coalition
and other antifemicide activists made notable progress in forcing a recal-
citrant political and corporate establishment to take some action (Pérez
Garcı́a 1999). The appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the
murders in 1998 and the formation of an office to work with victims’
families were major successes for the movement. In addition, politicians
running for statewide and federal office were forced to answer questions
regarding their approach to the violence against women in northern Mex-
ico, and corporate officials fell under heightened international scrutiny as
activists beyond Mexico pressured them to take measures to improve the
safety of their workers. Chávez Cano explained, “The coalition won some
major battles. We were in a war against the establishment. They wanted
to keep profiting from the idea that the victims were worthless because
they were poor and female. We fought them and did not let them get
away with it.”12
The public woman discourse lurked even within the actions that the
governing political and corporate elites did take. For instance, the crim-
inologist hired by Mexican officials in 1998 to examine the crimes an-
nounced that they were the result of temptations created by the victims,
whom he compared to offering candy to schoolchildren; they were
“sweet” temptations (Orquiz 1998, 3C; translation mine). He concluded
that the murders reflected a “social shock” due to an assault on “traditional
values,” as reflected in women working and finding entertainment outside
the home. True to the public women discourse behind his conclusions,
he placed much of the blame for the violence on the victims when he
warned that “women workers [are] seeking adventure without paying
attention to the danger” (3C; translation mine). His findings corroborated
the necropolitical order that normalized violence against public women.
One year later, the director of the Asociación de Maquiladoras de
Ciudad Juárez (AMAC) espoused similar ideas in a high-profile interview
aired on the U.S. news program 20/20. In response to a question about
the source of the violence, he retorted, “Where were these young ladies
when they were seen last? Were they drinking? Were they partying? Were
they on a dark street? Or were they in front of their plant when they went
home?” (Quiñones 1999). More women on the street, in his view, meant
more dead bodies on the street.
Such assertions began to haunt the governing elites as more bodies
appeared and as the national and international press turned femicide into
12 Interview with Esther Chávez Cano, at her home in Ciudad Juárez, February 2003.
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 717
a major news item. In 2001, the terrible discovery of eight female corpses
in central Ciudad Juárez, in a lot located directly across from the AMAC
offices and down the street from the city’s only Walmart, galvanized out-
rage across the country. Thousands across the country protested the gov-
ernment’s failure to stop the torture and murder of the city’s young
women. Marches within the city, across the state, and across the country
ensued; new organizations formed with stronger international connec-
tions, and congressional delegations from the United States, Spain, and
other prominent countries added to the pressure. The United Nations
appointed delegations to investigate the crimes, and Amnesty Interna-
tional (2003) gathered evidence for a scathing report on the government’s
incompetent investigations, on its indifference to the murders, and on the
public woman discourse used to blame the victims.
Through the protests, delegations, and human rights reports, a differ-
ent narrative gained strength about the murders and the state’s respon-
sibility in relation to them. The activists launched a narrative of impunity,
a charge leveled at the governing authorities for providing safe harbor to
well-connected criminals. The focus on impunity had roots in the early
coalition protests that had criticized political and corporate leaders for
creating a context, via their normalizing story of public women, that
deflected attention from the murderers and justified state inaction. As
Quintana (2010) commented in a major Mexican newspaper, the femicides
revealed “the impunity of the state.” After 2001, the activists circulated
the narrative of impunity across domestic and international networks and
turned it into a political challenge to the authorities’ ability to control
the interpretation of the murders.
Under renewed political pressure, the governing authorities expanded
their use of the public woman discourse by aiming it increasingly at the
activists in addition to the victims (Wright 2007). They associated the
activists with prostitutes who functioned as madams, who sold the bodies
of the dead to an international press always looking for stories of sex and
violence along the border.13 In 2003, the governor’s office focused this
assault on the leaders of an organization called Las Mujeres de Negro, a
coalition of organizations based in the state capital that had joined together
13 This attack on activists has always accompanied the protests. Chávez Cano was a
primary target in 1999, and family members of the victims have also been harassed and
assaulted (Amnesty International 2003). But it expanded noticeably after the 2001 protests
(see also Martı́nez Coronado 2003).
718 ❙ Wright
to coordinate protests after the 2001 murders.14 Accusing the Mujeres de
Negro of, as one journalist described it, “profiting from dead girls,” the
state attorney general publicly denounced all antifemicide activists as sell-
ing out the victims and their grieving families for their own political and
economic gain (Piñon Balderrama 2003, A1). The Mujeres de Negro
fought back by announcing that the governor had declared “war against
NGOs” and the democratization that they represent (Perea Quintanilla
2003). The activists sharpened their discourse on impunity, and via a
number of protest events they kept it in the news as a strategy for declaring
their own war against the government’s ongoing efforts to spin the mur-
ders as normal. “They thought we would shut up,” said Irma Campos, a
Mujeres de Negro leader, in 2007, “but we just got more angry and saw
that the stakes were high. We had to keep the message of impunity in the
news. We could not let them win that fight.”15
The attack on the activists proved much more damaging to the anti-
femicide movement than the implications that victims were responsible
for their own murders had been. As one of the Mujeres de Negro leaders,
Alma Gómez, told me in 2007, “It wasn’t true, but the accusation of
‘lucrar’ was very damaging.”16 By the early 2000s, the idea that women
who protest publicly on the street are hysterical and suspicious gained
steam as the local media reported on infighting within the organizations
and on the personal profiting of some activists who acted as spokespeople
for the movement (see, e.g., Guerrero, Minjáres, and Torres 2004; Rod-
rı́guez Nieto 2004). As a result, public sympathy began to wane by 2004.
The necropolitics of public women began to pay off for governing elites
as they intensified their attacks on the activists. By 2005, domestic pressure
over the femicides was neglible as the governing authorities and corporate
leaders announced that the activists had done enough damage to the
region’s reputation and that it was time to think about other things, such
as restoring the area’s good reputation for cheap and productive labor.
Within a couple of years, however, another set of events related to drug
violence would create a new set of challenges for both the antifemicide
activists and the governing authorities in their war over the meaning of
violence for the state. These events had been presaged in 2003 by the
14 In northern Mexico, especially in Ciudad Juárez, this assault also drew strength from
the region’s fame as a place where women had participated in the country’s democratization
movement of the 1980s, which eventually brought an end to the monopoly that the Insti-
tutional Revolutionary Party held over the country’s governance (Hernández Hernández
2002).
15 Interview with Irma Campos, Chihuahua City, February 2007.
16 Interview with Alma Gómez, Ciudad Juárez, 2007.
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 719
discovery of the bodies of twelve men in a middle-class neighborhood, a
few kilometers from where the eight women and girls had been dumped.
The male victims also showed signs of torture and were buried in a shallow
grave in the backyard of a middle-class home. The government imme-
diately attributed the murders to the internal politics of drug gangs (nar-
cos); the house quickly gained fame as “a narcocasa,” the shallow grave
as a “narcofosa,” and the dead bodies as “narcos.” Their discovery, unlike
that of the eight female victims, did not spark a public outcry. There were
no marches, no protests, and little public pressure placed on authorities.
The story of impunity told by the antifemicide activists did not find instant
traction with the murders attributed to drug violence, but within a few
years, antifemicide and civil rights activists had begun to organize a public
campaign illustrating how the government’s story of public women is part
and parcel of its story of drug violence. Challenging the government’s
story of narcopolitics is now a major battle in the war against its necro-
politics.
The gendered politics of “killing each other off”
The war of interpretations also forms part of the “war against organized
crime.”—Vı́ctor Quintana, state legislator (2010)
That the upsurge in violence and the intensification of its public viciousness
is tied to a restructuring of the country’s lucrative drug trade is not under
dispute. Rather, the war of interpretation revolves around the story told
by governing elites regarding the meaning of this violence for the state
and its subjects, versus the one told by human and civil rights activists
critical of the government’s interpretation of the violence, the corpses it
produces, and their political significance. At the heart of this war of in-
terpretation is the ongoing gendering of public space as a principal mech-
anism of necropolitics.
The government’s discourse of drug violence rests on a blame-the-
victim strategy that, like the discourse of public women, relies on the
gendering of the public sphere to tell the following tale: Drug violence
is an outcome of the disputes internal to the drug trade that emerge when
competition over markets, resources, alliances, and political protection
develops. The violence, therefore, is perpetrated by businessmen involved
in an illegal business. Even though these businessmen are criminals, they
demonstrate the masculine traits of competition, rationality, and violence.
720 ❙ Wright
By understanding their masculine traits, the rest of the public can rest
assured that the violence, while appearing chaotic, actually demonstrates
an intrinsic logic and structure. Since the violence is intended for targets
within the drug trade and not innocent civilians, and because the violence
is disruptive to social stability, it is bad for business; consequently, the
violence represents disruptions to the drug trade that are unwelcome to
the rational businessmen involved in it, who only resort to it out of des-
peration. The key points in this discourse are that the violence is internal,
it disrupts the drug trade, and we know these things because those per-
petrating the violence are rational. They do not kill people at random.
The people they kill, by and large, are criminals guilty of being involved
in the drug trade. Drug violence is the killing of criminals by other crim-
inals.
This discourse began to take shape in the mid-1990s with the formation
of the Ciudad Juárez and Sinoloa drug cartels and the subsequent violence
in northern Mexico that began to capture headlines at the same time as
the femicides and the passage of NAFTA. For instance, a 1993 New York
Times article outlines the discourse as it develops through interviews with
business and political leaders: “Rather than merely moving cocaine, the
official said, Mr. Felix Gallardo, a former Sinaloa state policeman, has
emerged as a diversified merchant of narcotics services. . . . ‘Felix Gallardo
is really a sort of investment banker for the others,’ the official said”
(Golden 1993, A3). The article then quotes a business leader who voices
the common idea of the violence as internal to the business: “‘Mostly you
saw them killing each other,’ said Mr. Niebla, the head of a local man-
ufacturers’ group. ‘More than making you concerned, it made you happy:
they were wiping each other out’” (A3). The characterization of the cartel
bosses as international businessmen, sometimes referred to as cocaine busi-
nessmen, and the idea of the violence as largely irrelevant for people not
involved in the trade, is found throughout news accounts based on
interviews of Mexican political and business leaders (Robberson 1993;
von Raab and Messing 1993). The sound of “quiet,” as one journalist
reports officials as saying, “is the sound of business booming” organized
by men who are “cooler” and “more businesslike” than typical homicidal
maniacs; they have rational reasons for “killing each other” (Golden 1995,
A1). Such interpretations of the violence endow the criminals with a
logical mindset reminiscent of rational choice actors: they are driven by
their business interests, they resort to extreme measures to protect their
turf and territory against competitors, but they are not irrational lunatics
wreaking havoc on society, because, in the end, chaos is bad for business.
This reasoning reiterates stereotypical images of the mafia world as the
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 721
domain of an aggressively professional and competitive masculinity, such
as the kind portrayed in Hollywood films like the Godfather trilogy, with
its ongoing refrain that the violence is all business and nothing personal,
emotional, or irrational. The government’s portrayal of narcos holds to-
gether around a binary of masculine rationality in contrast to feminine
irrationality, a binary spatially organized around men’s violent business
on the streets in contrast to women’s domestic activities. The purported
rationality of narco businessmen is vital to the government’s reassurance
that innocent people need not worry.17 Their story of the drug violence
has been repeated by the drug gangs themselves, which post messages on
narcomantas (drug banners) painted on bedsheets and hurled from the
city’s bridges, in which they declare themselves to be businessmen with
families who do not kill innocent victims.18 In other words, they may be
criminals, but they are still good patriarchs.
Portrayals of the cartels as run by rational businessmen—circulated
through the news media, scholarly accounts, the film industry, and other
venues—remained largely uncontested until the mid-2000s, when violence
erupted along Mexico’s northern border, particularly in the cities of Nuevo
Laredo and Matamoros. With gun battles waged in city streets, an in-
creasing body count, and an escalation of fear among residents and tour-
ists, the government’s story began to ring hollow. As Mexican citizens
started to protest the violence, many scholars and journalists questioned
the meaning of the violence for the government’s ability to govern. Even
U.S. officials expressed concerns that a “narco state” was emerging in
Mexico, as either a parallel version of the official state or as the force
behind the actual governance structure (see, e.g., Economist 2009, 30).
Mexican government officials argued forcefully against these claims and
stuck to their story that the violence was narcoviolencia, perpetrated by
criminals against criminals who were not targeting innocents. As the mayor
of Nuevo Laredo exclaimed, “The media are being very alarmist. . . .
Sure, there is a drug war. But it’s between traffickers. The tourists go
home safe and sound” (Adams 2005, 1A). The victims were guilty of
their crimes, and the criminals kept to their targets; they were not irrational
men with guns. This story was put to its initial strongest test in a war of
words between then-President Vicente Fox and the U.S. ambassador to
Mexico, Tony Garza. When Garza issued a travel warning for U.S. tourists
17 The expansion of journalism and novels on the cartels in Mexico also typically reifies
this stereotype of the drug business as run by extremely macho men, who are sadistic and
dedicated to their business. See, e.g., Ravelo (2007, 2009) and Cruz (2008).
18 See Frontera NorteSur (2009).
722 ❙ Wright
traveling along portions of Mexico’s northern border in 2005, then–
Mexican Foreign Secretary Luis Ernesto Derbez characterized the advisory
as “in large measure, exaggerated, and outside the scope of reality,” and
President Fox implied that the travel advisory represented an attack on
the country’s sovereignty (Harman 2005, 1). The message from the Mex-
ican government was that, as long as they were not involved in the drug
trade, tourists and other civilians had no reason to fear for their safety,
since the cartels, the president promised, were “killing each other” in
response to government disruptions of their business (Thompson 2005,
A4). The flip side to this statement is that under ordinary circumstances,
the narcos would not be killing each other off, because the violence is
bad for business (Thompson and McKinley 2005, A1).
However, shortly after the United States expressed concerns that Mex-
ico was on the verge of becoming a failed state, the newly elected President
Felipe Calderon declared “war” against the cartels (Debusmann 2009).
Within the year, he deployed thousands of troops to Ciudad Juárez, among
other cities, and vowed to quash any doubts regarding the strength of
the Mexican state. Since then, the violence has only intensified, each year
revealing more horrific murders than the previous, with the body count
surpassing all records since the 1910 Revolutionary era.
As the violence worsens, civil and human rights activists, many of them
from antifemicide organizations, have challenged the government’s story
of rational drug violence with the narrative of impunity. Their story is the
same as the one told as part of the antifemicide activism: they contest the
government’s claims that the victims are guilty of the crimes perpetrated
against them and that the violence illustrates an intrinsic logic (Human
Rights Watch 2010). Rather than a violence that could be justified as
cleansing society of criminals, activists have pointed to the violence as
evidence of the government’s complicity in creating the conditions for it
to occur in the first place. As one scholar and activist explained in a May
2008 interview, “They try to say that the narcos only kill each other.
That’s a lie. But people have believed it because it gives false assurances.”19
While the activists do not articulate an explicitly gendered discourse, as
when confronting the government’s story of public women, they never-
theless critique the intrinsically masculinist analysis of the violence as the
work of rational actors. As the informant above put it, “Really what we
have are a bunch of crazy men with guns and a state that lets them get
away with it. And we can’t tell the difference between the violence by
narcos and the violence by the soldiers. What we do know is that the
19 Interview, Ciudad Juárez, May 2008.
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 723
victims are not guilty.” As another informant explained, “There is no
difference right now between the troops and the narcos. They both have
guns and point them at civilians. That’s all the logic we have here. That
is our state.”20 Or another: “If someone tells me to freeze, then I’ll freeze.
I don’t need to know if its a narco or a soldier. Right now, they are the
same. We have nothing but impunity for criminals, and so the state is a
criminal too.”21
In May 2009, in a call to protest sparked by the murder of a popular
university professor, Manuel Arroyo Galván, organizers sharply resisted
the government’s lumping of the murder into the category of narcovio-
lence. “Meny [Manuel Arroyo] was not involved. He is not guilty of
anything. He was another innocent killed in this city full of death, full of
corpses, full of fear. We are a city dying in fear and sadness,” explained
another scholar in a phone conversation in June 2009. In the days after
Dr. Arroyo’s murder, protestors organized a march to challenge the ex-
planation of his death as evidence of another criminal taken care of by
narcoviolence. Protesters pushed the message of impunity: “We demand
justice for all of the murders, kidnappings, and the state of impunity that
we suffer in this city!” one activist Web site declared.22
Still, even with the protests mounting against the discourse of a rational,
businesslike narcoviolence, political leaders from the president to the
Ciudad Juárez mayor stuck to their story, repeating in interview after
interview that the narcos are killing each other off (BBC News 2008;
Wilkinson 2008). The general in charge of the government’s military
strategy for the state of Chihuahua even boasted to activists who protested
the military’s killing of some fourteen people in a public shootout that
“there are 14 fewer delinquents” (La Jornada 2008). He then went on
to dismiss the activists as too soft for the hard business of fighting a war.
The gendered undertone of his dismissal was not lost on many activists.
However, as protests and reports of impunity began to have an impact,
political leaders have added a new twist to their story, explaining that the
current upsurge in violence represents success of the federal government’s
war that has disrupted the quiet coveted by the criminal business leaders.
As the federal Attorney General Eduardo Medina told a BBC interviewer
in 2008, the violence is indicative of the success that the military presence
is having in various Mexican cities (BBC News 2008). Thus, the old
20 Interview, Ciudad Juárez, May 2008.
21 Interview, Ciudad Juárez, May 2008.
22 See http://zapateando.wordpress.com/2009/06/03/marcha-en-protesta-por-el
-asesinato-del-maestro-manuel-arroyo-galvan-en-juarez/.
724 ❙ Wright
discourse of the violence as stemming from sources internal to the drug
trade has changed to one that identifies the violence as stemming from
government actions that have disrupted the trade. The benefits, however,
remain the same. As the mayor of Ciudad Juárez explained to the Los
Angeles Times, the drug war “will end only when both sides have ended
up killing each other [off]” (Wilkinson 2008). And then there will be no
more violence.
The U.S. government, despite its initial warnings that the violence
represented a threat to civilians, has since begun to corroborate the Mex-
ican government’s story of success against the cartels. For instance, in a
recent Voice of America report, the director of national intelligence, Dennis
Blair, assured, “Mexico is in no danger of becoming a failed state. The
violence we see now is the result of Mexico taking action against the drug
cartels. So it is in fact the result of positive moves, which the Mexican
government has taken to break the baneful influence that many of these
cartels have had on many aspects of Mexican government and Mexican
life” (Homeland Security Newswire 2009). Blair’s statement was recently
echoed by the U.S. deputy assistant secretary for counternarcotics, who
announced, “We firmly believe the Mexican government is taking the
steps that it needs to take and is being quite courageous as it confronts
a significant problem. . . . The Mexican people are paying a very high
price because drug-fueled organized crime groups are killing each other.
But I believe, and I think the Mexican government believes, that only
through this sort of very effective, systematic work can they retake the
streets” (Whitesides 2009). Again, more violence on the streets means
more security, and based on its confidence in the Mexican military strategy
the U.S. government has authorized the largest military aid package to
Mexico in the history of the two countries.
The Mexican government urges faith in its rationality argument
through direct communications with citizens, like a 2009 advisory issued
by the Department of Municipal Civil Protection in Chihuahua City. Ti-
tled “How to Behave with Hit Men and in Shootouts,” the advisory
assures, “Although it may seem incredible, the hit men never confuse
[their targets] upon making sure that the [intended] victims are in the
car. In case they doubt it, they prefer to stop the car to make sure. And
if the person is not the one they are looking for, then they will let him
[or her] go” (Quezada Barrón 2009, A1; translation mine). According
to the newspaper coverage of this report, the advisory urges its readers
to stop their cars, raise their hands, and comply with the hit men’s in-
structions, which may include providing identification and other personal
information. It also reminds the reader that those who owe nothing have
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 725
nothing to fear (A1). As the newspaper account explains, the advisory
offers further advice for people who are stopped by military patrols, which
is identical to the advice for how to behave with hit men. People are
advised to stop their cars, raise their hands, and provide identification
upon request. Soldiers, like narco hit men, are rational actors and will
only take you if you have given them a reason to do so.23 At no point
does the communiqué advise people to contact authorities, to request
identification from those stopping them, to resist, to scream, or to do
anything but freeze and calmly comply.
The government communiqué illustrates a key element of necropolitics
as described by Mbembe when he observes that the power of the state
materializes in the struggles of armed gangs pitted against armed soldiers,
all targeting the civilian population, designated as such by their unarmed
status. But it also reveals an aspect of necropolitics that Mbembe leaves
unaddressed, the role of gender in creating, as Landes identifies, a mech-
anism of violence fundamental to the concept of rational states and sub-
jects. The gendering of public and private space creates the social and
political context that gives rise to the rational men, whether in soldiers’
units or narco gangs, who carry guns as evidence of social and political
stability.
At the time of this writing, the most concerted critique of Mexican
necropolitics is developing in a protest against the president’s reaction to
a January 31, 2010, massacre of teenagers at a residential birthday party.
In response to the news of the carnage the president announced that the
violence appeared to be the result of “a rivalry between gangs” (Elling-
wood 2010). Protests immediately erupted in the city as the families of
the victims refuted the accusation, and they grew as activists joined the
families in impromptu press conferences that captured headlines around
the world (Cardona 2010). Through their protests, the story of impunity
gained strength against the government’s story of narcos killing narcos,
and the Calderón administration organized a meeting between the pres-
ident and the protestors in the city. President Calderón’s arrival was met
with further protests, led largely by victims’ families. Several mothers of
the slain children stood with their backs to the president and received
boisterous applause when one yelled out: “Enough with your war!” (Wil-
kinson 2010).
23 I am grateful to Molly Molloy for bringing my attention to this article and for sending
it to the Frontera-list that she manages. Her postings have helped me tremendously in this
research.
726 ❙ Wright
Conclusion
Despite the many similarities linking the blame-the-victim discourses
about public women and drug gangs, current protestors face an uphill
struggle to subvert governmental efforts to represent the dead bodies as
evidence of state success in disrupting the drug business. Antifemicide
activists have made many strides in weakening the discourse of public
women as they successfully organized a transnational social justice move-
ment that led to legal reforms within Mexico and international pressure
on its government, but they have a long fight ahead if they are to succeed
in dismantling the story of drug violence as perpetrated by criminals
against one another. Feminist scholars can help in this endeavor by ex-
posing how discourses of a rational masculinity contribute to violence, to
the silencing of citizens, and to state-sanctioned impunity. Just as feminist
scholars provided the term femicide, which has proven so valuable to
activists in northern Mexico, feminists could help subvert the logic that
depicts drug violence as a productive development.
Postcolonial scholars such as Mbembe, Michael Hardt, and Antonio
Negri, who identify a politics as the work of death within the messy
interactions linking the production of the state to the reproduction of its
subjects, provide helpful tools in recognizing the Mexican government’s
politics of violence for what it is. The dead provide the raw materials for
this politics; their bodies, their gender, their location, and their scars and
mutilations are the basis for weaving tales of public women and rational
drug lords. Their deaths are politically significant for the government’s
justifications of its measures to protect the lives of Ciudad Juárez residents
as necropolitics meets biopolitics in the city streets. However, the phe-
nomenon is incomprehensible without a feminist analysis of the patriarchal
state ideology that undergirds the violent status quo.
As with feminist critiques of universal narratives that have been instru-
mental to pointing out limitations in understandings of global capitalism,
human rights, and citizenship movements (see, e.g., Gibson-Graham
1996), feminist analyses are needed to illuminate the gaps in universalist
depictions of the necropolitical and biopolitical forces at play in politics,
economics, and culture. The reproduction of subjects does not occur in
a blanket fashion such that unarmed civilians emerge as those targeted by
marauding men in the same way everywhere around the world. Rather,
understanding the actual mechanisms of necropolitics requires engaged
critique that connects the social negotiations of identity, including ne-
gotiations over identifying the dead, which vary across contexts. Given
the pervasiveness of gender as a political matrix for reproducing such
S I G N S Spring 2011 ❙ 727
binaries as rationality and irrationality, public and private, virtue and con-
tagion, and legitimate and illegitimate citizens, gender must be addressed
if scholars of the politics of war, of terrorism, and of death are to speak
meaningfully to activists and scholars who engage with these politics in
the places where they live and build their political communities.
Departments of Geography and Women’s Studies
Pennsylvania State University
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Silvia Federici on Women and Capitalism
13 Sep 2019
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Dan interviewed legendary feminist scholar Silvia Federici on Caliban and the Witch at her Brooklyn apartment. Next year, he’ll make a return trip to discuss Wages for Housework.
Here’s the article on the Pawtucket factory strike by Joey La Neve DeFrancesco that Dan mentions
jacobinmag.com/2018/06/factory-workers-strike-textile-mill-women
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Topics:
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Silvia Federici