JOSIAH McCONNELL HEYMAN

Employment

2002- University of Texas at El Paso

Professor of Anthropology

Endowed Professor of Border Trade Issues

Director of the Center for Interamerican and Border Studies (2014-present)

Chair, Department of Sociology and Anthropology (2002-2014)

1989-2002 Michigan Technological University.

2000- Professor

1994-2000 Associate Professor

1989-1994 Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Science, Technology,and Society

Education

Ph.D., Anthropology, City University of New York, Graduate School, 1988.

Dr. Eric R. Wolf, Advisor

B.A., Anthropology, The Johns Hopkins University, 1980.

Awarded University and Departmental Honors.

Languages spoken: English (native speaker), Spanish (competent second language speaker)

Grants and fellowships

Co-PI (PI, William Hargrove, UTEP), “Sustainable water resources for irrigated agriculture in a desert river basin facing climate change and urban growth: From characterization to solutions,” U.S. Department of Agriculture, $5 million/5 years (UTEP $2.2 million)2015-present. Role: co-leader, with Hargrove, of overall project.

Co-PI (PI, Lisa Cacari Stone, U of New Mexico)“Border Control Policies, Human Rights and Security: Changing the National Discourse through Community Engaged Scholarship and Service Learning,” Inter-University Program in Latina/o Research, $5,000, 2014-2015. Role: co-leader of regional interuniversity collaborative workshops on border issues (Chihuahua/Texas/New Mexico).

Co-PI (Silvia Torezani, UTEP and Jose Lopez Lopez, Universidad de Guadalajara, PIs), “A Socio‐Cultural and Epidemiological Profile of the Mexican Migrant Elderly in Jalisco and Texas,” Programa de Investigacion en Migracion y Salud, $40,000,2014-2015. Role: consulted on research design.

Other significant contributor (PI, Elias Provencio, UTEP) "Revision Application to Support Environmental Health Disparities. (2011-2013). National Institute of Health, National Institute of Minority Health Disparities, $752,795. Role: co-organizer of public participatory activities.

Co-PI (PI, William Hargrove, UTEP), "Sustainability on the border: Water, climate, social change in a fragile landscape" (2010-2012). National Science Foundation (Water Sustainability and Climate Program) $150,000. PI or co-PI on four grant applications based on this planning grant, leading to major project (above).

Co-PI (PI, Amado AlarcónAlarcón, UniversitatRoviraiVirgili), “Spanish-English Bilingualism in the U.S. Border Economy,” Ministry of Education of Spain, Programa José Castillejo (JC2008-00011) and ProgramaSalvador de Madariaga (PR2009-0202) (no UTEP funds). Role: joint fieldwork and analysis.

Co-PI (PI, Hector Balcazar, UT Houston School of Public Health), “A Household Survey to Explore Health Disparity Domains on the U.S.-Mexico Border,” NIH. 2008-2010. $298,747.

Independently reviewed part of $6.5 million Hispanic Health Disparities Research Center grant.

Role: co-leader with Balcazar on a large public health survey, design and analysis.

Overseas Investigator (PI, Lenore Lyon), “Comparative Border Studies,” Australian Research Council. No UTEP funds. 2008-2010. Role: consulted on project.

Co-PI (PI, NuriaHomedes, UT Houston School of Public Health) “Access and Barriers to Health Care of Uninsured Immigrants in El Paso,” Paso del Norte Health Foundation, 2006-2007, $56,815. Role: co-leader with Homedes, joint fieldwork, and analysis.

Co-P.I.(PI, SoheilNazarian, UTEP), National Science Foundation, “Extreme Events at U.S.-Mexico Border Ports of Entry,” 2003-2006, $435,000. Role: leader of social science team; fieldwork on ports of entry.

P.I. Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Conference Grant, 1997, “States and Illegal Networks--Comparative Approaches from Anthropology, Sociology, and History.” $15,000. Role: organized workshop and published book based on it.

P.I., The Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, Research Grant, 1991-1992 U.S.-Mexico Border, Arizona and California."The Immigration and Naturalization Service on the U.S.-Mexico Border" $45,000. Role: Entire project, including fieldwork.

P.I.,Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Grant-in-Aid, 1991-1992. See preceeding grant. $10,000. Role: Entire project, including fieldwork.

P.I., Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research

Richard Carley Hunt Memorial Post-Doctoral Fellowship, 1989. $5,000. Role: wrote book (with a baby on my knee); published.

Eric R. Wolf, PI as supervisor, National Science Foundation

Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant, 1984-1986 U.S.-Mexico Border, Agua Prieta, Sonora, Mexico (residence) and Douglas, Arizona, U.S. P.I., "A Comparison of Two Working Class Sub-Cultures on the United States-Mexico Border" $12,000. Role: Entire project, including fieldwork.

P.I., Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research

Student Grant-in-Aid, 1985-1986. See NSF, above. $4,000. Role: Entire project, including fieldwork.

P.I., Henry L. and Grace Doherty Foundation

Doherty Fellowship in Latin American Studies, 1984-1985. See NSF, above. $6,000. Role: Entire project, including fieldwork.

National Science Foundation

National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, 1981-1984, $11,000/year stipend and tuition.

Publications (*refereed publication)

Books

(1) *1999 Heyman, Josiah McC., ed. States and Illegal Practices (Oxford: Berg Publishers).

(2) *1998 Heyman, Josiah McC. Finding a Moral Heart for U.S. Immigration Policy: An Anthropological Perspective, American Ethnological Society, Monographs in Human Policy Issues. (Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association).

(3) *1991 Heyman, Josiah McC. Life and Labor on the Border: Working People of Northeastern Sonora,

Mexico1886-1986 (Tucson: University of Arizona Press).

Edited Special Issues/Sections of Journals

(4) 2012 Heyman, Josiah McC., ed. “Special Feature: The 2011 Eric Wolf Prize of the Political

Ecology Society (PESO)” [6 articles] Journal of Political Ecology 19: 94-183.

(5) 2009 Collins, Timothy W., and Josiah McC. Heyman, eds., “Special Feature: The 2008 Eric Wolf

Prize of the Political Ecology Society (PESO)” [5 articles] Journal of Political Ecology 16: 1-103.

(6) 2006 Heyman, Josiah McC., AlakaWali, and Evelyn Caballero, eds., “Contributions to Public

Policy, Program Planning, and Research Practice,” special issue of Practicing Anthropology, 28(4).

(7) 2004 Heyman, Josiah McC., and Hilary Cunningham, eds., “Movement on the Margins: Mobilities and Enclosures at Borders,” special issue of Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 11(3).

Articles, Book Chapters, and Long Essays(excludes blog postings, short book reviews, and short encyclopedia entries—list available by request)

(8) *2015 Heyman, Josiah McC., “Political-Ethical Dilemmas Participant Observed,” in Sam Beck

and Carl A. Maida, eds., Public Anthropology in a Borderless World, pp. 118-143. New York and Oxford: Berghahn.

(9) 2015 Heyman, Josiah, and Merlyn D. Heyman, “Occupy in a Border City: El Paso, Texas, U.S.A.”

in Todd Comer, ed., What Comes After Occupy?: The Regional Politics of Resistance, pp. 104-123, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

(10) *2014Alarcón, Amado, Antonio Di Paolo, Josiah Heyman and María Cristina Morales,

“The Occupational Location of Spanish–English Bilinguals in theNew Information Economy: The Health and Criminal JusticeSector in the US Borderlands with Mexico,”in Callahan, Rebecca M. & Gándara, Patricia C. (Eds.). The Bilingual Advantage: Language, Literacy, and the Labor Market, pp. 110-137. Multilingual Matters: Clevedon, U.K.

(11) *2014Alarcón, Amado, Antonio Di Paolo, Josiah Heyman and María CristinaMorales,

“Returns to Spanish–English Bilingualism in the New InformationEconomy: The Health and Criminal Justice Sectors in the TexasBorder and Dallas-Tarrant Counties,” in Callahan, Rebecca M. & Gándara, Patricia C. (Eds.). The Bilingual Advantage: Language, Literacy, and the Labor Market, 138-159. Multilingual Matters: Clevedon, U.K.

(12) 2014Heyman, Josiah McC. “Policing and Security,” in Donald Nonini, ed., A Companion to

Urban Anthropology, pp. 271-290. Malden, MA: Wiley.

(13) 2014 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Commentary” [on four articles in special section, The dialectics of

migration: part 2], Dialectical Anthropology on-line first, DOI 10.1007/s10624-014-9343-4

(14) *2014 Heyman, Josiah McC. “The Border Network for Human Rights: From Community

Organizing to Public Policy Action,” City & Society 26(1): 73-95.

(15) *2014 Alarcón, Amado,and Josiah Heyman, “From "Spanish-Only" Cheap Labor to

Stratified Bilingualism: Language, Markets and Institutions on the US-Mexico Border,”International Journal of the Sociology of Language227: 101-117.

(16) 2014 Heyman, Josiah McC., Nicholas Fischer, and James Loucky,“Immigrants and

Immigration,” inMartin Parker, George Cheney, Valérie Fournier and Chris Land, eds.,The Routledge Companion to Alternative Organization, pp. 135-150. London and New York: Routledge.

(17) *2014 Heyman, Josiah McC. “‘Illegality’ and the U.S.-Mexico Border: How It Is Produced and

Resisted,” in Cecilia Menjívar and Daniel Kanstroom, eds.,Constructing Illegality in America: Immigrant Experiences, Critiques, and Resistance, pp. 111-35. New York and Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

(18) 2013 Martínez, Daniel E., Jeremy Slack, and Josiah McC. Heyman, Bordering on Criminal: The

Routine Abuse of Migrants in the Removal System.Part I: Migrant Mistreatment While in U.S. Custody. Washington, DC: Immigration Policy Center.

(19) *2013 de Heer HD, Salinas J, Lapeyrouse LM, Heyman J, Morera OF, Balcazar HG. “Binational

utilization andbarriers to care among Mexican American border residents with diabetes,”RevistaPanamericana de SaludPublica, 34(3):147–54.

(20) *2013 de Heer HD, Balcázar HG, Morera OF, Lapeyrouse L, Heyman JM, Salinas J, Zambrana

RE. “Barriers to care and comorbidities along the U.S.-Mexico border,” Public Health Reports128(6): 480-488.

(21) 2013 Heyman, Josiah McC. “The Study of Illegality and Legality: Which Way Forward?”

PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review36(2): 304-307.

(22) 2013 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Capitalismo, movilidaddesigual y la gobernanza de lafrontera

México-EstadosUnidos,” in Alejandra Aquino, Amarela Varela, and FrédéricDécosse, eds.,Desafiandofronteras: Control de la movilidad y experienciasmigratorias en el contextocapitalista, pp. 25-40. México, DF: Frontera Press/Sur+.

(23) *2013 Heyman, Josiah McC. “A Voice of the US Southwestern Border: The 2012 ‘We the Border:

Envisioning a Narrative for Our Future’ Conference,” Journal of Migration and Human Security1(2): 60-75.

(24) *2013 Luykx, Aurolyn, and Josiah McC. Heyman, “The limits of critical pedagogy: teaching

about structural obstacles to students who overcame them,” International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 26: 346-68.

(25) *2013 Hargrove, W. L., D. M. Borrok, J. M. Heyman, C. W. Tweedie, and C. Ferregut. “Water,

climate, and social change in a fragile landscape,”Ecosphere 4:art22.

(26) 2013 Heyman, Josiah McC.“Political Economy,” in James G. Carrier and Deborah Gewertz, eds.,

Handbook of Sociocultural Anthropology, pp. 88-106.London: Bloomsbury Academic.

(27) *2013 Alarcón, Amado,and Josiah McC. Heyman,“Bilingual Call Centers at the U.S.-

Mexico Border: Location and Linguistic Markers of Exploitability,” Language in Society 42:1-21.

(28) 2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Culture Theory and the US–Mexico Border,” In Hastings Donnan

and Thomas Wilson, eds., A Companion to Border Studies, pp. 48-65. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.

(29) 2012 Heyman, Josiah McC., and John Symons, “Borders,” in Didier Fassin, ed., A Companion

to Moral Anthropology, pp. 540-557. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.

(30) *2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Constructing a ‘Perfect’ Wall: Race, Class, and Citizenship in US-

Mexico Border Policing,” in Pauline Gardiner Barber and Winnie Lem, eds.,Migration in the 21st Century: Political Economy and Ethnography, pp. 153-74 (New York and London: Routledge).

(31) 2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Capitalism and US policy at the Mexican border,”Dialectical

Anthropology[invited essay with three respondent comments] 36 (3-4): 263-77.DOI10.1007/s10624-012-9274-x

(32) 2012Heyman, Josiah McC., and Howard Campbell. “The Militarization of the United States-

Mexico Border Region,” Revista de EstudosUniversitários [Universidade de Sorocaba, São Paulo, Brasil] 38(1): 75-94. (Special issue: MilitarizaçãonasAméricas).

(33) *2012Alarcón A., Amado,and Josiah McC. Heyman. “Limitessocioeconómicos a la extensión

de la lenguaespañola en los EstadosUnidos,” REIS: Revista Española de InvestigacionesSociológicos 139: 3-20.

(34) *2012 Smith,Curtis, Ernesto Castañeda, and Josiah McC. Heyman. “The Homeless and Occupy

El Paso: Creating Community among the 99%,” Social Movement Studies: Journal of Social, Cultural, and Political Protest,11 (3–4): 356–66. DOI:10.1080/14742837.2012.704179.

(35) *2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Political Economy and Social Justice in the US-Mexico Border

Region,” in Mark Lusk,Kathleen Staudt, and Eva Moya, eds.,Social Justice In The U.S.-Mexico Border Region, pp. 41-59. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer Verlag.

(36) *2012 Greenberg, James B., and Josiah McC. Heyman, “Neoliberal Capital and the Mobility

Approach in Anthropology,” in James B. Greenberg, Thomas Weaver, Anne Browning-Aiken, and William L. Alexander, eds.,Neoliberalism and Commodity Production in Mexico, pp. 241-68. Boulder: University Press of Colorado.

(37) *2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Class Consciousness in a Complicated Setting: Race, Immigration

Status, Nationality, and Class on the U.S.-Mexico Border,” in E. Paul Durrenberger, ed., The Anthropological Study of Class and Consciousness, pp. 223-248. Boulder: University Press of Colorado.

(38) *2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Construcción y uso de tipologías: movilidadgeográficadesigual en

lafrontera México-EstadosUnidos”, in Marina Ariza y Laura Velasco Ortiz (coords.), Métodoscualitativos y suaplicaciónempírica:Por los caminos de la investigaciónsobremigracióninternacional, pp. 419-54. México, DF:Instituto de InvestigacionesSociales, UNAM, y El Colegio de la Frontera Norte.

(39) 2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “La ofensiva anti-inmigración y lasrespuestas pro-inmigración de

losEstadosUnidos,” in Roberto Sánchez Benítez, coord., Economía, politíca, y culturatransfronteriza: 5 ensayos, pp. 55-72. Monterrey, NL, México: CECyTE NL-CAEIP (Proyecto Centro de Altos Estudios e InvestigacionesPedagogicas).

(40) *2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Eric R. Wolf,” Oxford Bibliographies in Anthropology. John L.

Jackson, ed. New York: Oxford University Press. .

(41) 2012 Castañeda, Ernesto, and Josiah McC. Heyman, “Isthe Southwestern Border Really

Unsafe?” Scholars Strategy Network, Basic Facts Brief,

(42) 2012 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Deepening the Anthropologyof Bureaucracy” (Review Essay),

Anthropological Quarterly85: 1269–1278.

(43) *2011 Heyman, Josiah McC. "An Academic in an Activist Coalition: Recognizing and Bridging

Role Conflicts.” Annals of Anthropological Practice 35(2): 136-153.

(44) 2011 Heyman, Josiah McC. "Guns, Drugs, and Money: Tackling the Real Threats to Border

Security" (invited public policy paper). Washington, DC: Immigration Policy Center.

(45) 2011 Heyman, Josiah McC. "Essay: The U.S. Political Community: Anti-Immigration Sentiment

and Issues of Race, Class, Gender, Conscience, and Political Belief," inAnti-Immigrationism in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Kathleen Arnold, ed. Vol. 2, pp. 795-806. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood.

(46) *2011 Heyman, Josiah McC., and Howard Campbell, "Afterword: Crime on and Across

Borders," in Smugglers, Brothels, and Twine: Historical Perspectives on Contraband and Vice in North America's Borderlands. Elaine Carey and Andrae M. Marak, eds., pp. 177-190. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

(47) 2011 Heyman, Josiah McC. "Cuatrotemas en los estudios de la fronteracontemporánea," in

Natalia RibasMateos, ed., El Río Bravo Mediterráneo: Las RegionesFronterizas en la Epoca de la Globalización, pp. 81-97.Barcelona: EdicionsBellaterra.

(48) * 2011 L. M. Lapeyrouse, O. Morera, J. McC. Heyman, M. A. Amaya, N. E. Pingitore and H.

Balcazar, "A Profile of US-Mexico Border Mobility Among a Stratified Random Sample of Hispanics Living in the El Paso-Juarez Area," Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, on-line first, DOI: 10.1007/s10903-011-9453-x

(49) 2011Heyman, Josiah McC. “Review of ‘Engaging Contradictions: Theory, Politics, and Methods

ofActivist Scholarship’” (Review Essay)Collaborative Anthropologies 4: 270-76.

(50) *2010Heyman, Josiah McC. “The State and Mobile People at the U.S.-Mexico Border,” in Winnie

Lem and Pauline Gardiner Barber, eds.,Class, Contention, and a World in Motion, pp. 58-78 (Oxford: Berghahn Press).

(51) *2010Heyman, Josiah McC. "US-Mexico Border Cultures and the Challenge of Asymmetrical

Interpenetration," in Hastings Donnan and Thomas M. Wilson, eds.,Borderlands: Ethnographic Approaches to Security, Power, and Identity, pp. 21-34 (Lanham, MD: University Press of America).

(52) *2010Talavera, Victor S., Guillermina Gina Núñez-Mchiri, and Josiah McC. Heyman,

"Deportation in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands: Anticipation, Experience, and Memory," in Nicholas De Genova and Nathalie Peutz, editors, The Deportation Regime: Sovereignty, Space, and the Freedom of Movement, pp. 166-95 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press).

(53) 2010 Heyman, Josiah McC. "Activism in Anthropology: Exploring the Present through Eric R.

Wolf’s Vietnam-Era Work" [invited essay]Dialectical Anthropology34(2): 287-293.

(54) 2010 Heyman, Josiah McC., and Howard Campbell, “Bordering Culture: The U.S.-Mexico Case,”

in E. Paul Durrenberger and Suzan Erem, eds., Paradigms for Anthropology: An Ethnographic Reader, pp. 189-201 (Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers).

(55) 2010Heyman, Josiah McC. "Briefing on Arizona's Immigration Law, S.B. 1070," Human Rights

and Social Justice Committee Briefing No. 1, Society for Applied Anthropology. Available at Reprinted, in part, as "Arizona’s Immigration Law – S.B. 1070," SfAA News, 21(3) August 2010, pp. 23-27.

(56) *2009Heyman, Josiah McC., and Howard Campbell, “The Anthropology of Global Flows: A

Critical Reading of Appadurai’s “Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy” Anthropological Theory 9(2): 131–148.

(57) *2009Heyman, Josiah McC. "Trust, Privilege, and Discretion in the Governance of the US

Borderlands with Mexico," Canadian Journal of Law and Society / Revue CanadienneDroitetSociété 24(3): 367-390.

(58) *2009 Heyman, Josiah McC. "Risqueetconfiancedans le contrôle des frontièresaméricaines"

["Risk and Trust in U.S.Borderlands Enforcement"] Politix Vol. 22, No. 87: 21-46.

(59) *2009 Heyman, Josiah McC., and Jason Ackleson, “United States Border Security after September

11,”in John Winterdyck and Kelly Sundberg, eds.,Border Security in the Al-Qaeda Era, pp. 37-74,Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.

(60) *2009 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Ports of Entry in the ‘Homeland Security’ Era: Inequality of

Mobility and the Securitization of Transnational Flows,” in Samuel Martínez, ed., International Migration and Human Rights: The Global Repercussions of U.S. Policy, pp. 44-59. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.

(61) *2009 Heyman, Josiah McC. "A Border That Divides. A Border That Joins," Anthropology Now

1(3): 79-85.

(62) *2009 Heyman, Josiah McC., Maria Cristina Morales, and Guillermina Gina Núñez, "Engaging

with the Immigrant Human Rights Movement in a Besieged Border Region: What Do Applied Social Scientists Bring to the Policy Process?" NAPA Bulletin [National Association for the Practice of Anthropology]31: 13–29.

(63) *2009Heyman, Josiah McC., Guillermina Gina Núñez, and Victor Talavera, “Health Care

Access and Barriers for Unauthorized Immigrants in El Paso County, Texas,” Family and Community Health, 32(1): 4–21.

(64) *2009 Campbell, Howard, and Josiah McC. Heyman, "The Study of Borderlands Consumption:

Potentials and Precautions," in Alexis McCrossen, ed., Land of Necessity: Consumer Culture in

the United States-Mexico Borderlands, pp. 325-332, Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

(65) *2009 Heyman, Josiah McC. "Conclusion: Can the World Be Micromanaged?"in James G. Carrier

andPaige West, eds.,Virtualism, Governance and Practice: Vision and Execution in Environmental Conservation, pp. 177-88. Oxford, UK: Berghahn Press.

(66) 2009Heyman, Josiah McC. "Be Careful How You Frame the Issues" [invited comment on article

by David Stoll], Society 46: 412-415.

(67) *2008 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Constructing a Virtual Wall: Race and Citizenship in U.S.-Mexico

Border Policing,” Journal ofthe Southwest 50(3): 305-334. Reprinted in edited form in Julie A. Dowling and Jonathan Xavier Inda, eds.,Governing Immigration through Crime: A Reader, pp. 99-114. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.

(68) *2008 Pallitto, Robert, and Josiah McC. Heyman (2008) “Theorizing Cross-Border Mobility:

Surveillance, Security and Identity,” Surveillance & Society 5(3): 315-333. Available at:

(69) *2008Dudley Ward, Nicholas, Gurian, Patrick L., Heyman, Josiah M., and Howard, Cheryl

"Observed and Perceived Inconsistencies in U.S. Border Inspections," Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, 5(1), Article 17. Available at:

(70) 2008 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Two Approaches to the U.S.-Mexico Border: Dramatic Debates and

Regional Complexities,” Contemporary Sociology, 37(1): 20-23. (Review essay)

(71) *2007Núñez, Guillermina Gina, and Josiah McC. Heyman, “Entrapment Processes and Immigrant

Communities in a Time of Heightened Border Vigilance,” Human Organization 66(4): 354-365. Spanish translation as: Núñez, Guillermina G. and Josiah McC. Heyman. "Comunidades de inmigrantes “atrapadas” en los procesos de control de la librecirculación: consecuencias de la intensificación de la vigilancia en la zonafronteriza México-EstadosUnidos." In Migración y Seguridad: nuevodesafío en México. Comp., Natalia Armijo Canto. Mexico: Casede, 2011.

(72) *2007Campbell, Howard, and Josiah McC. Heyman, “Slantwise: Beyond Domination and

Resistance on the Border,” Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 36(1): 3-30.

(73) *2007 Heyman, Josiah McC., and Howard Campbell, “Corruption in the U.S. Borderlands with

Mexico: The ‘Purity’ of Society and the ‘Perversity’ of Borders,” in Monique Nuijten and Gerhard Anders, eds.,Corruption and the Secret of Law: A Legal Anthropological Perspective, pp. 191-217, Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.

(74) *2007 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Environmental Issues at the U.S.-Mexico Border and the Unequal

Territorialization of Value,” in Alf Hornborg, J. R. McNeill, and Joan Martinez-Alier, eds.,Rethinking Environmental History: World-System History and Global Environmental Change,

Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press, pp. 327-344.

(75) 2007 Heyman, Josiah McC. “Grounding Immigrant Rights Movements in the Everyday Experience

of Migration,” International Migration, 45(3): 197-202. (Commentary on special journal issue)

(76) *2006 Villegas, H., P.L. Gurian, J.M. Heyman, A. Mata, R. Falcone, E. Ostapowicz, S. Wilrigs,

M. Petragnani, E. Eisele. "Tradeoffs between Security and Traffic Flow: Policy Options for Land Border Ports of Entry" Transportation Research Record, No. 1942: 16-22.