“…Counter-mapping initiatives have the capacity to ‘locate in place phenomena that might have been thought unmappable’ (Popovski and Young, 2023: 7), such as sounds, sensations, or infrastructural arrangements premised on invisibility and disappearance. Recent contributions in this vein use visual, sonic and digital methods (that rely upon web-based geographic information systems such as Google Maps, for example) to study a range of social and cultural changes in different environments, such as patterns in gender-based violence (Fileborn and Trott, 2021), the privatisation and securitisation of ‘public’ space (Tulumello, 2015), and the construction of border walls (Margulies, 2023). As a collaborative project and art work, where are you today succeeds in digitally and sonically mapping the border’s spaces of disappearance at a particular historical juncture, defined by major shifts in the system of immigration detention and the social upheavals of the COVID-19 pandemic on the one hand, and by continuities in colonial bordering practices on the other.…”