A piercing look at globalization through the eyes of women workers in Tijuana’s assembly plants, the maquiladoras.

“Making explicit the slogan ‘knowledge equals power,’ MAQUILÁPOLIS is the rare activist documentary that really does empower the individual women at the heart of its story.”

JAY WEISSBERG, VARIETY

Celebrating a 20-Year Legacy

2006 marked the premiere of an innovative, impact-driven documentary that uplifted the work of women on the U.S.-Mexico border, who sustained an economy that changed both nations and rapidly changed their lives. Vicky Funari and Sergio De La Torre’s groundbreaking documentary prioritized artful imagemaking and co-creative, community-based filmmaking. In the process, the promotoras whose stories are told in the film found new pathways for their activism and for telling their own stories. Twenty years later, we are celebrating the legacy of MAQUILÁPOLIS with screenings, events, and talks throughout 2026.

Anniversary Screenings & Events

The Film

Carmen and Lourdes work in Tijuana’s maquiladoras, the multinationally-owned factories which came to Mexico for its cheap labor. Each day these factory workers confront labor violations, environmental devastation and urban chaos — life on the frontier of the global economy. In MAQUILÁPOLIS, Carmen and Lourdes reach beyond the daily struggle for survival to organize for change: Carmen takes a major television manufacturer to task for violating her labor rights. Lourdes pressures the government to clean up a toxic waste dump left behind by a departing factory. The women also use video diaries to chronicle their lives, their city and their hopes for the future.

As they work for change, the world changes too: global economic crisis and the availability of cheaper labor in China begin to pull the factories away from Tijuana, leaving Carmen, Lourdes and their colleagues with an uncertain future. As promotoras – community advocates who fight for social justice – Carmen and Lourdes serve as role models for taking action in the face of adversity.

The struggle for equitable labor practices on both sides of the border continues today, and MAQUILÁPOLIS remains as powerful an exploration as ever, twenty years after its premiere.

The Team

The Promotoras

MAQUILÁPOLIS is a work of participatory documentary; the film could not have been made without the creative collaboration of workers and activists, promotoras, on whose work the film focuses.

Collaborating Promotoras

Diana Arias
Eva Bailón
Lucia Blanco
Lupita Castañeda
Carmen Durán
Naty Guizar
Tere Loyola
Lourdes Luján
Lety Meza

Vianey Mijangos
Yesenia Palomares
Adela Rivera
Francis Rodriguez
Delfina Rodriguez
Blanca Sanchez
Rocio Salas
Coty Valdez

Support

This film would not have been possible without the support of:

Process + Impact

One thing all the workers in MAQUILÁPOLIS had in common was a sense of agency: they were promotoras, women who sought out training in human rights, labor rights and environmental justice from non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and who became advocates committed to passing their knowledge on to their communities. The filmmakers invited promotoras in Tijuana and community organizations on both sides of the border to join in creating a film that depicted globalization through the eyes of the women who live on its leading edge. The factory workers who appear in MAQUILÁPOLIS [city of factories] were involved in every stage of production, from planning to shooting, from scripting to outreach. This collaborative process broke with the traditional documentary practice of dropping into a location, shooting and leaving with the "goods," which only repeated the pattern of the maquiladora itself. The process merged art-making with community development and sought to ensure that the film's voice would be truly that of its subjects.

Our Binational Community Impact Campaign, designed and implemented collaboratively with factory workers and stakeholder organizations in the U.S. and Mexico, used MAQUILÁPOLIS in diverse education and advocacy contexts to create meaningful social change around the issues of globalization, social and environmental justice, and fair trade. The campaign used the film as an organizing tool: to get people involved, to mobilize for change, and to support cross-issue and cross-border activism. The campaign ran formally from 2006-2009, and in some ways it continues informally to this day, as the film continues to be used by community activists and educators across the world. We invite you to participate too, by organizing a 20th anniversary screening of the film in your school or community.