The Conversation
ICE Detainees on Hunger Strike Are Being Force-Fed, Just Like Guantánamo Detainees Before Them
As with the Guantánamo detainees, migrants are risking starvation, but not because they want to die.
How Central American Migrants Helped Revive the US Labor Movement
Guatemalan and Salvadoran immigrants have organized far-reaching workers rights’ campaigns in migrant-dominated industries that mainstream unions had thought to be untouchable.
Community Schools Score Key Victory in LA Teachers Strike
Working with communities to improve schooling —and thereby democracy— is a central premise of the growing community schools movement.
Mexico Is Bleeding: Can Its New President Stop the Violence?
More than 250,000 people have been murdered and 35,000 have disappeared since the beginning of Mexico’s drug war.
Amazon Deforestation, Already Rising, May Spike Under Bolsonaro
By Robert T. Walker, University of Florida Over the past 25 years that I have been conducting environmental research in the Amazon, I have witnessed the the ongoing destruction of the world’s biggest rainforest. Twenty percent of it has been deforested by now—an area larger than Texas. I therefore grew hopeful when environmental policies began […]
Two Things You May Have Missed in Alfonso Cuarón’s ‘Roma’
The film contains other subtle but important elements that have been largely ignored by critics so far.
Is There a Crisis at the US-Mexico Border? 6 Essential Reads
Time for some facts.
More DREAMs Come True in California: How Tuition Waivers Opened Doors for Undocumented Students
Our findings carry important implications for the estimated 65,000 undocumented students who graduate from U.S. high schools each year.
Rightist Bolsonaro Takes Office in Brazil, Promising Populist Change to Angry Voters
Bolsonaro used a Trump-style populist playbook to win the Brazilian presidency in October with 54 percent of the vote.
Who Is Responsible for Migrants?
The flow of refugees and asylum-seekers from poor countries to the United States border is often attributed, incorrectly, to domestic unrest in a far-off nation.
Bolsonaro’s Anger Won Over Working-Class Brazilians, But His Presidency May Betray Them
The “Trump of the Tropics” is known for his law-and-order rhetoric, racist and sexist remarks, pro-business stances and outsider pledges to upend politics as usual.
Remembering the Caravan: 5 Essential Reads That Show the Desperation of Central American Migrants
Pieces that explain this human drama, not amplify political rhetoric about refugees.
The Challenge of Parenting in a Migrant Caravan
Children in these circumstances are more likely to suffer from mental health problems.
WhatsApp Skewed Brazilian Election, Proving Social Media’s Danger to Democracy
Misinformation via social media played a troubling role in boosting far-right Congressman Jair Bolsonaro to the presidency.
LGBTQ Caravan Migrants May Have to ‘Prove’ Their Gender or Sexual Identity at US Border
They will face a unique set of challenges.
Latinos Can Be an Electoral Force in 2020
The midterms hold important lessons for the next national vote.
Democracy Is at Risk in Latin America and the Far Right Is Moving in: Here’s How It Went Wrong for the Left
The risk is that democracy is failing many, increasingly normalizing the demonization of the “other.”
Visual Tropes of Migration Tell Predictable But Misleading Stories
The “caravan” of thousands of Central Americans currently traveling through Mexico has become a touchpoint for U.S. President Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric.
Why Does the Migrant Caravan Exist? And How Did It Come to Be?
Migrants are traveling together for their own protection, to avoid having to pay a smuggler and to minimize the risk of crime.
Democrats Can’t Count on Latinos to Swing the Midterms (OPINION)
This vote has always been more promise than reality.
Can the Census Ask if You’re a Citizen? What’s at Stake in Court Battles Over 2020 Census
If people don’t participate in the census, that could result in a less accurate population count.