“…Moreover, critical race spatial analysis offers a visual representation of inequities and resistance, and these visual representations can include maps, historical and contemporary data (i.e., news articles, historical documents, and other forms of media), individuals 'or groups' experiences, and statistical analyses over time (Du Bois, 1899;Farmer et al, 2020;Soja, 2010;Tate, 2008). From these elements emerge a more robust examination of the multiscalar realm (e.g., borderlands); a socially constructed and interconnected dimension composed of macro-geographical (global), meso-geographical (regional), and micro-geographical (local) layers (Morrison et al, 2017;Soja, 2010).…”