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.

  • Feb 7, 2019
  • 3:08 PM

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.

  • Feb 1, 2019
  • 1:45 PM

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.

  • Jan 31, 2019
  • 4:51 PM

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.

  • Jan 30, 2019
  • 12:52 PM

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 […]

  • Jan 28, 2019
  • 10:53 AM

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.

  • Jan 9, 2019
  • 5:32 PM

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.

  • Jan 2, 2019
  • 4:44 PM

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.

  • Jan 2, 2019
  • 11:04 AM

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.

  • Dec 28, 2018
  • 11:33 AM

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.

  • Dec 27, 2018
  • 9:11 AM

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.

  • Dec 26, 2018
  • 3:09 PM

The Challenge of Parenting in a Migrant Caravan

Children in these circumstances are more likely to suffer from mental health problems.

  • Dec 6, 2018
  • 8:36 AM

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.

  • Dec 5, 2018
  • 4:31 PM

Latinos Can Be an Electoral Force in 2020

The midterms hold important lessons for the next national vote.

  • Nov 19, 2018
  • 4:31 PM

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.”

  • Nov 9, 2018
  • 12:03 PM

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.

  • Nov 6, 2018
  • 2:13 PM

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.

  • Oct 31, 2018
  • 3:56 PM

Democrats Can’t Count on Latinos to Swing the Midterms (OPINION)

This vote has always been more promise than reality.

  • Oct 24, 2018
  • 1:05 PM

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.

  • Oct 23, 2018
  • 9:12 AM

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