Abstract

Using Mexico’s Tarjeta de Visitante por Razones Humanitarias (TVRH) as a primary case study, this article examines how states can use temporary protection schemes as border security measures while claiming to provide protection. Although the TVRH offers a legal pathway and status to move within Mexico, it equally restricts certain rights due to its temporary nature. It becomes a form of differential inclusion by which the state has the right to be able to “exclude and define the limits” of a particular population but also claim inclusion on humanitarian grounds. Despite the claim of protecting migrants, the application of this regular status can essentially become a form of interdiction, which sustains the political framing of migration as ultimately a “threat” that needs to be governed. On the ground, migrants with these temporary regular statuses occupy a liminal space and live a precarious existence similar to those migrants who do not possess a legal status at all. This power imbalance exists more often as states prefer to grant a temporary immigration status, which ensures less responsibility and support that accompanies more rights and protections. Based on policy analysis and field work, the article will examine the TVRH, the processes for obtaining this legal status, and the consequences for irregular migrants.

Highlights

  • Central American migrants from Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras have been increasingly fleeing their countries of origin in record numbers

  • The Tarjeta Visitante por Razones Humanitarias (TVRH) or the “visitor status for humanitarian reasons” is a regular status that may be obtained by a migrant who suffers or witnesses a crime while on Mexican territory

  • Similar to the narrative of protection and safety for migrants found in the PFS, the Tarjeta de Visitante por Razones Humanitarias (TVRH) could be used by the government to claim that it was responding to a humanitarian situation by providing migrants a legal and regular pathway while in Mexico

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Summary

Introduction

Central American migrants from Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras have been increasingly fleeing their countries of origin in record numbers. In Mexico, the government may use humanitarian grounds to grant this status and state that it seeks to “protect and safeguard” migrants; it is the border policies enforced by the nation-s­ tate that, in effect, render migrants insecure.

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