Can a Film Find Something New to Say About the Border Crisis?

"Borderland: The Line Within" takes a surprisingly multidisciplinary approach fueled by both personal history and government data.

Some of the devastating information presented in the new film "Borderland: The Line Within" (in theaters) is familiar from recent documentaries. Filmmakers concerned with the humanitarian crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border understand how the camera can draw attention to what news reports and punditry miss: the human cost of government policies and law enforcement practices. Putting faces on abstract numbers activates empathy in a way no speech ever really can.

Three participants in the film — Manan Ahmed, Alex Gil and Roopika Risam — are digital humanists, meaning they use data to inform their scholarly work in the humanities. All three have personal histories that intersect with U.S. immigration. Together, they use government data to spot patterns in public spending that tell a story about where, and how, taxpayer money is spent at the border. Their models also trace the flow of money toward politicians on all sides of the issue and directly connect to how immigration policy is made.

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