Resources

Border Information and Statistics

Immigration

Population and Demographics

Economic Development, Trade, and Finance

Environment and Quality of Life

Rule of Law and Security

Religion and Culture


Immigration

  • A Rising Tide of a Shrinking Pie: The Economic Impact of Legalization Versus Deportation in Arizona
    The economic analysis in this report shows the S.B. 1070 approach would have devastating economic consequences if its goals were accomplished. When undocumented workers are taken out of the economy, the jobs they support through their labor, consumption, and tax payments disappear as well. Particularly during a time of profound economic uncertainty, they type of economic dislocation envisioned by S.B. 1070-type policies runs directly counter to the interests of our nation as we continye to struggle to distance ourselves from the ravages of the Great Recession.
    Center for American Progress
    By Raul Hinojosa-Ojeda and Marshall Fitz
    March 24, 2011
  • Humanitarian Crisis: Migrant Deaths at the U.S.-Mexico Border
    The report analyzes deadly border enforcement policies and practices and their impact on individuals, families and communities and offers concrete recommendations to significantly decrease and possibly end the humanitarian crisis at the border.
    American Civil Liberties Union, San Diego & Imperial Counties
    October 1, 2009
  • Hispanics, Health Insurance and Health Care Access
    Six-in-ten Hispanic adults in the U.S. who are neither citizens nor legal permanent residents lack health insurance. That is more than twice as high as the rate among Hispanic adults who are citizens or legal permanent residents and more than three times the rate for the adult U.S. population. Almost all adult Hispanic immigrants who are neither citizens nor legal permanent residents are estimated to be undocumented. This group is also more likely than other Hispanic adults to lack a usual health care provider and seek services at a clinic or health center. About one-in-three of those without a usual provider report finances are a factor but the majority say they do not need one.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Gretchen Livingston
    September 25, 2009
  • Mexican Immigrants: How Many Come? How Many Leave?
    The flow of immigrants from Mexico to the United States has declined sharply since mid-decade, but there is no evidence of an increase in Mexican-born migrants returning home from the U.S.
    Survey data from the U.S. and Mexico reveal a large flow of migrants back to Mexico, but the size of the return flow appears to be stable since 2006. As for immigration to the U.S. from Mexico, surveys from both countries attest to recent substantial decreases in the number of new arrivals, reinforced by U.S. Border Patrol data showing markedly reduced apprehensions of Mexicans trying to cross into the United States illegally.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Jeffrey Passel and D'Vera Cohn
    June 22, 2009
  • Overview of Immigrant Eligibility for Federal Programs
    This eight-page report summarizes the benefit programs and eligibility rules for both documented and undocumented immigrants in California, including TANF, CHIP, food stamps, WIC, school lunch and breakfast, summer food, CalWORKS, Medicaid, and more.
    National Immigration Law Center
    By Tanya Broder and Jonathan Blazer
    October 2011
  • 2005 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics
    The Yearbook of Immigration Statistics is a compendium of tables that provides data on foreign nationals who, during a fiscal year, were granted lawful permanent residence (i.e., admitted as immigrants or became legal permanent residents), were admitted into the United States on a temporary basis (e.g., tourists, students, or workers), applied for asylum or refugee status, or were naturalized. The Yearbook also presents data on immigration law enforcement actions, including alien apprehensions, removals, and prosecutions.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    November 2006

  • Annual Flow Report: Refugees and Asylees: 2005
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By Kelly Jefferys
    May 2006

  • Annual Report: Immigration Enforcement Actions: 2005
    This Office of Immigration Statistics Annual Report presents information on the apprehension, detention, and removal of foreign nationals during 2005 as well as investigations of individuals or organizations in violation of immigration laws. Data were obtained from workload and case tracking systems of DHS.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By Mary Dougherty, Denise Wilson, and Amy Wu
    November 2006

  • Immigrants and the Cost of Medical Care
    Foreign-born adults in Los Angeles County, California, constituted 45 percent of the county's population ages 18-64 but accounted for 33 percent of health spending in 2000. Similarly, the undocumented constituted 12 percent of the nonelderly adult population but accounted for only 6 percent of spending. Extrapolating to the nation, total spending by the undocumented is $6.4 billion, of which only 17 percent ($1.1 billion) is paid for by public sources. The foreign-born (especially the undocumented) use disproportionately fewer medical services and contribute less to health care costs in relation to their population share, likely because of their better relative health and lack of health insurance.
    RAND Corporation
    , published in Health Affairs
    By Dana P. Goldman, James P. Smith, and Neeraj Sood
    November 14, 2006
  • Temporary Admissions of Nonimmigrants to the United States in 2005 (Annual Report)
    This Office of Immigration Statistics Annual Flow Report examines the number and characteristics of nonimmigrant admissions in 2005 recorded by the Treasury Enforcement Communications Systems (TECS) of the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    July 2006

  • Modes of Entry for the Unauthorized Migrant Population
    New estimates show that nearly half of all the unauthorized migrants now living in the United States entered the country legally through a port of entry such as an airport or a border crossing point where they were subject to inspection by immigration officials.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    May 22, 2006

  • Border Insecurity: - U.S. Border-Enforcement Policies and National Security
    Since 9/11, concern has mounted among policymakers and law-enforcement authorities that foreign terrorists affiliated with al Qaeda might use Mexico as a transit point to enter the United States, relying on the same people-smuggling networks as undocumented immigrants and becoming lost in the large undocumented flow. Some lawmakers have voiced fears that terrorists might be among the growing number of undocumented non-Mexicans crossing the southern border, although these Other Than Mexicans (OTMs) come principally from Central and South America. There is no evidence this has happened, despite suggestions by several lawmakers that the extremely small number of Arab and Muslim OTMs apprehended at the border constitutes a threat to national security.
    American Immigration Law Foundation
    By Walter Ewing
    Spring 2006

  • Mapping Trends in Naturalizations: 1980 to 2003 (Working Paper)
    This Office of Immigration Statistics Working Paper presents a visual analysis of the state of residence of newly naturalized citizens for the period 1980 to 2003.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By John Simanski
    March 2006

  • Estimates of the Legal Permanent Resident Population and Population Eligible to Naturalize in 2004
    This OIS Annual Population Estimates report provides estimates of the legal permanent resident population and population eligible to naturalize for fiscal year 2004.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    February 2006

  • Undocumented Immigrants: An Annotated Bibliography
    The annotated bibliography lists recent research concerning the size of the unauthorized immigrant population (in California and the United States) as well as the costs and benefits of providing services to both illegal and legal immigrants. The accompanying briefing note shows the distribution of unauthorized immigrants across regions and counties in 2000 and 2005, sorted by the share of illegal immigrants allocated to each county.
    by Alicia Bugarin and others, California Research Bureau. California State Library
    November 2005

  • Characteristics of Diversity Legal Permanent Residents: 2004 (Fact Sheet)
    Hundreds of thousands of immigrants become legal permanent residents (LPRs) of the United States every year. Approximately 50,000 of these are diversity LPRs who were granted LPR status through a diversity lot-tery. This Office of Immigration Statistics Fact Sheet provides definitions for terms related to LPRs and descriptive characteristics of persons who became diversity LPRs in the United States during 2004.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By Kelly Jefferys
    December 2005

  • Characteristics of Employment-Based Legal Permanent Residents: 2004 (Fact Sheet)
    This report defines terms related to legal permanent residents (LPRs) and describes the characteristics of persons who became employment-based LPRs during 2004.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By Kelly Jefferys
    October 2005

  • Characteristics of Family-Sponsored Legal Permanent Residents: 2004 (Fact Sheet)
    This report defines terms related to legal permanent residents (LPRs) and describes the characteristics of persons who became family-sponsored LPRs during 2004.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By Kelly Jefferys
    October 2005

  • Refugee Applicants and Admissions to the United States: 2004 (Annual Report)
    This Office of Immigration Statistics Annual Flow Report provides information on the number of persons who filed applications for refugee status, were approved for refugee status, or were admitted to the United States as refugees in 20041 by their country of origin.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    September 2005

  • Unauthorized Migrants: Numbers and Characteristics
    Provides statistics on Immigration (focus on Hispanics)- Demographics are included.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    June 14, 2005

  • U.S. Legal Permanent Residents: 2004 (Annual Report)
    This Office of Immigration Statistics Annual Flow Report presents information on the num-ber and characteristics of persons who became LPRs in the United States during 2004.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By Nancy F. Rytina
    June 2005

  • Naturalizations in the United States: 2004 (Annual Report)
    This Office of Immigration Statis-tics Annual Flow Report presents information on the number and characteristics of foreign nationals ages 18 years and over who were naturalized during 2004.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security
    By Nancy F. Rytina and Chunnong Saeger
    June 2005


  • California Report Card 2004: Focus on Children in Immigrant Families
    Children Now's compilation of statistics on children in Los Angeles, including school test scores, drop out rates, language skills, Head Start, poverty rates, WIC recipients, prenatal care, teen births, child abuse, gun injuries and deaths, and more.
    Children Now
    May 2004


  • California's Newest Immigrants
    Explores the demographic characteristics of recent immigrants, including region of origin, age at arrival, geographic concentration, family composition, educational attainment, hourly wages, poverty rates, employment, rates of home ownership, and English language ability.
    Public Policy Institute of California
    By Laura E. Hill and Joseph M. Hayes
    November 2003

  • Metropolitan Magnets for International and Domestic Migrants
    This report examines foreign immigration and US migration in the nation's 81 largest metro areas in the late 1990s, including Los Angeles, according to educational characteristics and race/ethnicity.
    Brookings Institution
    By William H. Frey
    October 2003

  • Legal Immigration to California in 2002
    Statistics on legal immigration to California by county, for 1990-2000, including Los Angeles County.
    California Department of Finance
    By Linda Gage
    October 2003

  • Immigrants in California - Just the Facts Series
    Two page statistical brief on immigrants.
    Public Policy Institute of California
    By Hans Johnson
    July 2002

  • Center for Comparative Immigration Studies Working Paper Series
    All papers presented at CCIS seminars and conferences will be published as CCIS Working Papers. They will be posted in the order they are published, and may be downloaded here.
    Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, UCSD

  • Immigration and the Economy
    Perhaps the most controversial and misunderstood issue surrounding contemporary immigration is the impact immigrants--particularly those without documentation-- have on the U.S. economy and the economic well-being of U.S. citizens.
    Justice for Immigrants

  • Response to Undocumented Immigration: The Arguments
    According to recent estimates by the Pew Hispanic Center, there are as many as 10-11 million undocumented immigrants currently in the United States. Two-three million are children. This estimate reflects an increase from 7.5 million projected by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2000. About 70 percent of the undocumented immigrant population has resided in the country for five years or more. Approximately 450,000 new undocumented immigrants enter the United States each year. As lawmakers and government officials consider various proposals designed to strengthen immigration law enforcement, one of the central issues in the immigration reform debate is how the United States should respond to the presence of the large undocumented population in our nation.
    Justice for Immigrants

  • Mexican Migration Project
    The MMP is a multidisciplinary research effort between investigators in Mexico and the United States. It has offices, in Mexico, at the Departamento de Investigacion sobre Movimientos Sociales of the University of Guadalajara and, in the United States, at the Office of Population Research of Princeton University.
    Office of Population Research, Princeton University

  • Mapping Immigration
    • Mapping Legal Permanent Residents (LPRs)
      These maps show LPRs in the United States for various years by class of admission and region/country of birth.
    • Mapping Naturalized Citizens
      These maps show the distribution of naturalized citizens in the United States for various years by state, class of admission, and region/country of birth.
    Office of Immigration Statistics, Department of Homeland Security

  • California Data Tables on Cash Assistance Programs for Immigrants
    Monthly statistics on CAPI applications received, requests for restorations, and applications approved or denied.
    Data Systems and Survey Design Bureau, California Department of Social Services

Population and Demographics

  • Pew Hispanic Center Releases Demographic Profiles of U.S. Hispanics by Country of Origin
    The Pew Hispanic Center, a project of the Pew Research Center, today released demographic profiles of the five largest Hispanic populations in the United States by country of origin: Mexican, Puerto Rican,* Cuban, Salvadoran, and Dominican. These profiles also describe the employment and income characteristics of each group. The characteristics of each group are contrasted with the characteristics of all Hispanics and the U.S. population overall. The profiles are based on the Center's tabulations of the Census Bureau's 2007 American Community Survey (ACS). The five demographic profiles are now available at the Pew Hispanic Center’s website.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Seth Motel and Eileen Patten
    September 16, 2009

  • Latino Children: A Majority Are U.S.-Born Offspring of Immigrants
    The number of Hispanic children has nearly tripled since 1980 and their demographic profile has changed. More than half of the nation's 16 million Hispanic children are now "second generation," meaning they are the U.S.-born sons or daughters of at least one foreign-born parent. In 1980, a majority of Hispanic children were third or higher generation -- the U.S.-born sons or daughters of U.S.-born parents. This report also looks at the differences in the socio-economic profile and legal status of Hispanic children by generation.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Richard Fry and Jeffrey Passel
    May 28, 2009

  • A Portrait of Unauthorized Immigrants in the United States
    The nation's 11.9 million unauthorized immigrants are more geographically dispersed than in the past, according to a new Pew Hispanic Center demographic and geographic analysis of this group that includes population and labor force estimates for each state. Undocumented immigrants also are more likely than either U.S. born residents or legal immigrants to live in a household with children, a growing share of whom--73%--are U.S. born citizens. The new report also finds that the recent rapid growth in the undocumented immigrant labor force has come to a halt, and estimates that the nation's 8.3 million unauthorized immigrant workers in March 2008 made up 5.4% of the labor force.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Jeffrey Passel and D'Vera Cohn
    April 14, 2009

  • Sharp Growth in Suburban Minority Enrollment Yields Modest Gains in School Diversity
    The student population of America's suburban public schools has shot up by 3.4 million in the past decade and a half, and virtually all of this increase (99%) has been due to the enrollment of new Latino, black, and Asian students. Suburban school districts in 2007 educated a student population that was 41.4% non-white, up from 28% in 1993. Despite the sharp rise in the racial and ethnic diversity of suburban district enrollments overall, there has been only a modest increase in the racial and ethnic diversity of student populations at the level of the individual suburban school. For example, in 2007, the typical white suburban student attended a school which had a 75% white student body; in 1993, this same figure had been 83%.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Richard Fry
    March 31, 2009

  • The Unique Challenges to the Well-Being of California's Border Kids
    This new report on California's "border kids"--the 800,000 children living in San Diego and Imperial counties--challenges many commonly-held stereotypes. A comprehensive set of indicators of border kids' health, education and economic well-being is provided.
    Children Now
    June 2007
  • The Changing Landscape of American Public Education: New Students, New Schools
    This report examines the intersection of two trends that have transformed the landscape of American public education in recent years: a rapid increase in enrollment and a surge in the opening of new schools. The report describes the racial and ethnic components of enrollment growth at various levels of the K-12 system. It also examines the composition of enrollment in newly-opened schools and older schools still in operation as well as the impact of rapid growth in Hispanic enrollment. Detailed statistics at the state level are also provided.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Richard Fry
    October 5, 2006

  • A Snapshot of Children on the San Diego-Mexico Border
    This eight-page report highlights disparities in child well-being in several areas of San Diego County with highly concentrated Latino residents and Mexican immigrants.
    Children Now
    2006

  • Border Kids Count: A Snapshot of Children Living on Mexico's Northern Border
    This report provides a close look at the Mexico and U.S. border region as it pertains to the 2 million children living in Mexico's northern border region -- defined as the 37 border cities within Mexico's six northern states of Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, and Tamaulipas.
    The Annie E. Casey Foundation
    2006
  • U.S. Border Populations
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    U.S.-Mexico border counties, from San Diego County in California to Cameron County in Texas, are currently home to 6.7 million persons, which, if they were a state, would make it the 13th largest in the Union. The combination of geographic proximity and economic integration between two very different nations has resulted in unique population characteristics in the southwest border region. Population growth in the border region has grown at a far faster rate than that of the population as a whole in both the United States and Mexico. In the United States, the four southwest border states have accounted for more than one-third of the nation's population growth since 2000, a pace far faster than any of the four U.S. Census Bureau's regions.1 Population is affected by the two national economies of the United States and Mexico that create distinct economic challenges. Mexico's population growth rate is strikingly higher than that of the United States.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • Mexico Border Populations and Policy Linkages
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    U.S.-Mexico border communities are inherently tied together by history, culture, and socio-economics. Terms such as "border pairs," "sister cities," and "borderplex regions" are commonly used to describe U.S.-Mexico border communities. Given the importance of population to economic activity, an understanding of Mexico's border population is important, inasmuch as it provides the context for the southwest border region's past and future development. In addition, policy makers at all levels of government are unlikely to be successful if they do not engage in 360 degree thinking; incorporating the impacts of Mexico's proximity, whether positive or negative, into their policy deliberations. Similar to the United States, Mexico's border populations are concentrated primarily in the same regions as their U.S. counterparts, the exception being the Middle Rio Grande on the Mexico side which has a substantial population not matched by a U.S. counterpart. There are 35 border municipios in Mexico; three in Baja California, six in Coahuila, six in Chihuahua, one in Nuevo León, ten in Sonora, and nine in Tamaulipas.1 A municipio in Mexico is equivalent to a county in the United States. Only one of Nuevo León's municipios is actually on the boundary line with the United States while Monterrey is about 150 miles from the border.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • Demographic Futures for California: Projections 1970 to 2020 that Include a Growing Immigrant Population with Changing Needs and Impacts
    Projections for the state and selected counties are prepared for 5- year intervals from 1980 to 2020, including age, sex, and race- ethnic dimensions.
    School of Policy, Planning and Development, University of Southern California
    January 2001

Economic Development, Trade, and Finance

  • Through Boom and Bust: Minorities, Immigrants and Homeownership
    During the housing boom of 1995-2005, the nation's minority groups experienced greater gains than whites in homeownership rates. But in the market meltdown since then, homeownership rates have fallen more steeply for most minorities than for whites. Through both boom and bust, Hispanics and blacks have been far more likely than whites to receive higher-priced loans and carry higher debt relative to their incomes. Meantime, while immigrants have a substantially lower homeownership rate than the native born, they also have experienced a smaller decline in the rate during the market bust. The report also examines how demographic patterns are related to foreclosure rates across the nation's 3,141 counties.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Rakesh Kochhar, Ana Gonzalez-Barrera, and Daniel Dockterman
    May 12, 2009

  • Fifty Years of Change on the U.S.-Mexico Border: Growth, Development and Quality of Live
    The U.S. and Mexican border regions have experienced rapid demographic and economic growth over the last fifty years. In this analysis, Joan Anderson and James Gerber offer a new perspective on the changes and tensions pulling at the border from both sides through a discussion of cross-border economic issues and thorough analytical research that examines not only the dramatic demographic and economic growth of the region, but also shifts in living standards, the changing political climate, and environmental pressures, as well as how these affect the lives of people in the border region.
    Joan B. Anderson and James Gerber, University of Texas Press, 2007.

  • Remittances
    Several tables and charts that show the amounts of money sent from Mexican immigrants in the United States back to their homes in Mexico. These comprehensive charts show the remittances going to the different states in Mexico.
    Instituto de los Mexicanos en el Exterior
    September 2007
  • Economic Impacts of Border Wait Times at the San Diego-Baja California Border Region
    An extensive study that estimates the impact the wait times at the San Diego-Baja California border has on the economies of both nations. The reports focused on personal travel as well as freight movement. Some of the impacts shown are the delays on productivity, industry competitiveness, and lost business income for both nations at the local, state, and national level.
    Sandang (San Diego Association of Governments)
    June 2005- September 2007
  • Borderless Biotech & Mexico's Emerging Life Sciences Industry
    This briefing paper is an initial look at the multiplicity of opportunities that exist in Mexico. It provides some insight into what may be the barriers to harnessing necessary capabilities on the part of the Mexicans, but also vis-à-vis perceptions of Mexico by the life science clusters in San Diego and Orange Counties. The report highlights the contributions Mexican scientists and companies have made to the development of life sciences, and provides introductions to the regions identified by Merck. It is also a reminder of the capabilities of Baja California, and their connection to the greater San Diego region.
    San Diego Dialogue, UCSD
    June 2007
  • OECD Economic Outlook No. 92 - OECD Annual Projections
    Summary of economic developments and projections for Mexico taken from the latest OECD Economic Outlook.
    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
    December 2012

  • Mexico: Selected Issues
    Having implemented major reforms over the course of the last 20 years, Mexico now enjoys a degree of economic stability and per capita income that compares favorably with most of Latin America. Since 2003, Mexico's economy has grown by 3-4 percent a year. On the other hand, Mexico's income over a longer period has not been converging with that of other OECD members. And while Mexico's growth record is similar to that of many other countries in the region, it falls short of that in some other emerging market countries, suggesting that there is scope to raise long-run growth to a higher sustainable path. This paper surveys the evidence and arguments about what has prevented higher growth, to form a summary diagnosis of key areas for structural reforms needed to lift growth constraints and raise living standards.
    International Monetary Fund, Country Report No. 06/351
    Prepared by S. Phillips, G. Mehrez, and V. Moissinac
    October 11, 2006

  • Mexico's Competitiveness: Reaching Its Potential
    The objective of this report for Mexico's competitiveness is to inform policy makers, the private sector, and the public at large about competitiveness priorities and shortcomings in Mexico, and to point the way forward on improving competitiveness. The report highlights constraints to competitiveness and identifies key high impact interventions to maximize Mexico's potential for efficiency, generate jobs, and move the country to a more innovation-driven stage of development. It draws on a series of focused analytical pieces that were conducted for Phases 1 and 2 of the Programmatic Analytical and Advisory Activities, as well as extensive World Bank work on competitiveness issues in Mexico and beyond. The report also recognizes that the Fox administration has taken important steps that have laid a solid foundation for future efforts. Yet, improving competitiveness is a long-term challenge that the next administration will face over the coming years.
    The World Bank
    August 10, 2006

  • Income
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    Economic development of the U.S.-Mexico border county region is a paradox of growth without progress. Throughout the 1990s, border counties witnessed economic gains, best captured by lower unemployment rates and growth in jobs and income,1 yet would rank 39th if considered a 51st state based on per capita income. Income and employment rates both grew at a faster pace than the national average, as seen in Figures 4.1 and 4.2.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • Labor Force, Labor Pool and Unemployment
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    One of the factors contributing to the labor market, as well as to lower overall income levels along the border, is low labor force participation rates which measure adults 16 years and older in the labor force. In 2003, the participation rate for all border counties was 61.7 percent. Removing San Diego and Pima counties, the rate falls to 57.3 percent compared to the remaining U.S. rate of 64.9 percent. Rates of participation also varied widely among individual border counties, with Hidalgo (NM) reporting a low of 44.9 percent, a percentage of more than 20 points from the top five counties (Jeff Davis, Terrell, Brewster, Presidio, and San Diego).
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • Employment
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    Throughout the 1990s, employment growth in U.S. border counties outpaced the nation. Within the 10 year period of 1993 to 2003, total full-time and part-time jobs increased by nearly 800,000 to almost 3.5 million, with half of the actual job gains accounted for by San Diego, and another quarter accounted for by Pima and El Paso counties. Aggregate border employment, like income and the labor force, is population dependent; but, the growth in employment in the region would rank it 7th when including San Diego, and place between 4th and 5th without San Diego when viewed as a 51st state. Not surprisingly, the five largest border county populations - San Diego, Pima, El Paso, Hidalgo (TX), and Cameron - accounted for 86.2 percent of the entire job market along the border in 2003. Meanwhile, eight of the smaller border counties had less than 5,000 jobs each.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006


  • Trade and Border Traffic
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    Differences in border-crossing patterns between U.S. southwest ports of entry are primarily attributable to city size and geography, and existed long before the passage of North American Free Trade Agreement. Greater people and vehicle flows occur where a U.S. border city and its neighboring Mexican city have a larger combined populace. Although southwestern border counties would rank 13th in population if considered a 51st state, border counties would rank 22nd in U.S. state rankings on the allocation of federal highway planning and construction expenditures between 1993 and 2003. Southwestern border counties also support the nation's industrial base by geographically being located on the well established trade corridors from Mexico to the industrial Northeast, Midwest, and other regional markets. As a result, there is greater traffic along the entry points closer in distance or connected to well-established transportation nodes, such as interstate highways. In addition, within southwest border counties, especially urban centers, commuting and local traffic issues are recognized as growing but still far removed in terms of the scale of traffic impediments faced by most of the nation's urban areas.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • Housing
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    Housing in southwest border counties is marked by two positive factors that many areas of the nation cannot claim. First, home ownership is higher than in most of the nation which would rank border counties 22nd as a 51st state. Second, the median price of a home places the region 37th as a 51st state, a ranking that falls to 45th without San Diego. Low housing costs are also passed to the rental market which provides more affordability than much of the nation. Low median housing values provide southwest border counties an excellent opportunity to attract in-migration for those seeking to lessen the financial burden of housing, for attracting industries that are looking at housing as a key factor in relocation and for retirees, flocking to the sunbelt for, among other reasons, affordable housing.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • Borderless Innovation
    The global economic landscape has changed dramatically during the past several years. The number of regions around the world that have the skills and capabilities to compete in science and technology-based industries has grown, offering leading companies numerous options for where they locate facilities or source their products. As the first major report to emerge from the Crossborder Innovation and Competitiveness Initiative, Borderless Innovation examines opportunities and challenges for the San Diego-Baja California region to enhance its competitiveness and remain a leader in the global economy.
    San Diego Dialogue, UCSD
    January 2006

  • The Economic Impact of the Mexico-California Relationship
    The report analyzes the benefits and costs that the immigrant and native-born Latino populations of Mexican origin con-tribute to the California economy. In addition, the report presents an analysis of the Mexico-California relationship related to commerce, investment and expenditures, and tourism. The report is based on the most recent, publicly available information from gov-ernment, private, and higher education institutions from both the United States and Mexico.
    The Tomás Rivera Policy Institute
    By Jeronimo Cortina, Rodolfo de la Garza, Sandra Bejarano, and Andrew Wainer
    September 2005
  • Lessons from NAFTA for Latin America & the Caribbean
    The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has spurred economic development in Mexico, but is not enough to achieve economic convergence with Canada and the United States even in the long run without investment in innovation, infrastructure and adequate institutions, a new World Bank study says.
    The World Bank
    December 17, 2003

  • Human Resources Issues: U.S.-Mexico Joint Ventures
    Regional trade alliances, such as the NAFTA, have motivated an increasing number of U.S. multinationals to set up joint ventures in Mexico. While such ventures require both sides to understand and use different management practices, practitioners are paying increasing attention to the human resources aspect of such ventures.
    U.S.-Mexico Chamber of Commerce
    By Parmila Rao, Ph.D. candidate, George Washington University
    December 10-12, 2001

  • NAFTA and Maquiladoras: Is the Growth Connected?
    After Canada, Mexico and the United States adopted NAFTA in 1994, the growth of Mexican maquiladora plants soared. These plants typically import U.S. inputs, process them and ship them back to the United States. Because maquiladoras involve U.S.-Mexico trade and their growth acceleration coincided with NAFTA's inception, many concluded that the trade agree- ment caused this growth. However, after examining the relationship, we find that what explains maquiladora growth before NAFTA can also explain it after NAFTA.
    Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
    By William C. Gruben and Sherry L. Kiser
    June 2001
  • Transportation: Infrastructure and the Border Economy
    On a typical day, about 205,000 vehicles and 97,000 pedestrians cross the Texas-Mexico border.1 The 15,000 commercial trucks and 1,220 railcars that traverse the border daily highlight the importance of international trade to this region. In addition, the many shopping malls, grocery stores and discount supercenters attest to the numbers of Mexican nationals crossing the border to buy goods ranging from pasteurized milk to expensive clothes and jewelry. The costs of building and maintaining infrastructure to service international trade, however, remain a challenge.
    Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
    By Keith Phillips and Carlos Manzanares
    June 2001

  • Housing Affordability: Outlook Improving Along the Border
    In recent years the U.S. homeownership rate has reached historic levels. The 66.8% recorded in 1999 is the highest since the statistic was first collected in 1965. Texas experienced a similar trend in 1999, posting the highest home-ownership rate since 1984. The most recent statistics available for Texas-Mexico border communities show home-ownership rates comparable to those of Texas as a whole. In 1990, Texas' 60.9% rate was only slightly above El Paso's 58.7% and several points below Brownsville's 64.4%.
    Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
    By Toby Cook
    June 2001

  • The Border: Is it Really a Low-Wage Area?
    Arbitrage is a basic tenet of economics: If prices are relatively low in one location, buyers move in and bid prices up until parity with other areas is achieved. In labor markets, arbitrage implies that firms should be drawn to low-wage areas, causing job growth to be highest where pay is lowest, as long as all other things-taxes, public services, rents, access to customers and so forth-are equal.
    Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
    By Lori L. Taylor
    June 2001
  • Texas Border Cities: An Income Growth Perspective
    Texas border cities are characterized by certain economic features: more transportation and distribution activity than in other U.S. cities, a relatively large retail sector and a large government sector. The six cities of Brownsville, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, El Paso, Laredo and McAllen fit this description. However, these cities also have differences that make it difficult to generalize about their future or the outcome of various policy proposals based solely on border location.
    Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
    By Robert W. Gilmer, Matthew Gurch, and Thomas Wang
    June 2001


  • Maquiladoras: Impact on Texas Border Cities
    Mexico's maquiladora industry has become an increasingly significant component of the Mexican economy as well as an important part of U.S. corporate strategy in achieving competitively priced goods in the world marketplace. Maquiladoras are largely concentrated in Mexican cities that border the United States. Since Texas encompasses about half the U.S.-Mexico border, maquiladoras are especially relevant to the state's economy.
    Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
    By Lucinda Vargas
    June 2001


  • Maquiladoras at a Glance
    Statistical data on maquiladoras (foreign-owned assembly plants in Mexico) around the border. Includes an industry breakdown, example of the maquiladoras in Mexico, a worker’s profile copulated from various different sources.
    CorpWatch
    June 30, 1999

Environment and Quality of Life

  • OECD Statistical Profile of Mexico - 2009
    More than 100 indicators covering a wide range of areas: economy, agriculture, education, energy, environment, foreign aid, health and quality of life, industry, information and communications, population/labour force, trade and investment, taxation, public expenditure and R&D. Click on the red i beside each indicator to obtain the unit of measure, a short introductory text, a detailed definition of the indicator, comments on comparability of the data, and a list of references for further information on the indicator. To compare Mexico with other OECD countries, click on the table and chart icons at the end of each row to obtain the comparative data in Excel format.
    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
    October 28, 2009 (last extraction date)

  • Most Mexicans See Better Life in the U.S.
    A survey of Mexico finds most dissatisfied with the direction of their country. Huge numbers say the economy, crime, drugs and corruption are very big problems. One in three would migrate if they had the chance; most would do so without authorization.
    Pew Hispanic Center
    September 23, 2009
  • The Flow of Used and Waste Tires in the California-Mexico Border Region
    This report is about the export of used and waste tire from California into Mexico. The study analyzes this flow in quantitative terms; estimates the economic impact of the flow in California and Baja California; discusses the environmental impacts of waste tire piles in Baja California; and details the ultimate disposition of tires in this transborder tire trade. The report concludes with recommendations for possible transborder cooperative actions by the CIWMB and counterpart agencies in Mexico to mitigate the negative impacts of the cross-border tire flow and to support the continuance of this binational commecial activity.
    California Integrated Waste Management Board
    August 2009
  • BECC-NADB Joint Status Report
    The Border Environment Cooperation Commission (BECC) and the North American Development Bank (NADB) were created as part of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The BECC, located in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, and the NADB, located in San Antonio, Texas, constitute a binational approach to environmental infrastructure development and financing in the U.S.-Mexico border region. Projects assisted by the BECC and the NADB focus on improving the environment and health of communities located within 100 kilometers (about 62 miles) north of the international boundary in the four U.S. states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California and within 300 km. (about 186 miles) south of the border in the six Mexican states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, Coahuila, Chihuahua, Sonora, and Baja California.
    Border Environment Cooperation Commission and the North American Development Bank
    December 31, 2006
  • State of the Border Region
    Border 2012: U.S.-Mexico Environmental Program Indicators Report 2010
    Border 2012 is a ten-year cooperative program designed "to protect the environment and public health in the U.S.-Mexico border region, consistent with the principles of sustainable development." Federal, state, tribal and local institutions and agencies collaboratively work to produce prioritized and sustained actions that consider the needs of the border communities. The actions implemented under Border 2012 are guided through a series of results-oriented goals and objectives, and measure by environmental and performance indicators.
    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: US-Mexico Border Program - Border 2012
    May 2011

  • Border 2012 U.S. - Mexico Environmental Program: California/Baja California Accomplishments
    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: US-Mexico Border Program - Border 2012
    2006


  • The Mexican Healthcare System: A Federal Perspective
    Mexico Ministry of Health
    By Enrique Ríos, National Director, Migrant Health Program
    August 10, 2006


  • Briefing note for OECD Health Data 2006: MEXICO
    Total health spending accounted for 6.5% of GDP in Mexico in 2004, more than two percentage points lower than the average of 8.9% in OECD countries.
    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
    June 26, 2006
  • Health and Health Care
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    The U.S.-Mexico border counties health and health care systems face a much different set of issues than the rest of the nation. As a starting point, if considered a 51st state, the southwestern border counties would rank last in the presence of health care professionals.1 With many southwestern border counties unable to provide basic health services to residents there are several "health professional shortage areas" (HPSAs) designated by the federal government. This human resource problem in border counties leads to basic health maintenance challenges which are compounded by lack of insurance, lack of access to health care facilities, and low per-capita income. The result of this mix of factors is well documented and leads to uncompensated care to hospitals soaring past $800 million dollars annually in the southwest border counties, approximately 3 percent of all uncompensated costs in U.S. hospitals per year, according to the American Hospital Association.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • The Environment
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    Environmental issues impacting border counties relate to pollution levels, water quality and use, air quality, land use, and the existence of colonias. Environmental factors are viewed by many as key to the quality of life in a region, and may become aggravated by a lack of fiscal and capital resources necessary to address clean-up, remediation, and other issues. In many cases, there are critical environmental needs in the border area that include some form of near-term intervention requiring substantial investments of both time and funding.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006

  • Public and Higher Education
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    It is generally agreed that education is perhaps the most important component of regional economic growth. As an example, one need only compare San Diego County to Cameron County, the counties at the opposite ends of the southwestern border. In San Diego County, 30 percent (29.6%) of the population has earned a four-year college degree or higher. By contrast, Cameron County reports a rate that is less than half of San Diego (13.3%). The same trend holds for high school graduation rates and emphasizes what has been promoted for decades - education matters! Over the course of a work life, individuals with a college degree will earn one million dollars more than their high school graduate counterparts, and the gap widens for non-high school graduates.1 These education disparities highlight the problems border counties are facing in the educational arena. The root of these problems lie in the fact that the education shortfall in the region exists at all levels of the education system, from pre-kindergarten through college, and prevails among all age groups. Unless these trends change significantly, the simple fact is the border will never catch up with the U.S. mainstream.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006
  • U.S.-Mexico Border Environment: Air Quality and Transportation & Cultural and Natural Resources
    This year's report, the Board's Ninth Report to the President and Congress, provides advice from two angles on maintaining healthy environmental quality along the U.S.-Mexico border. First, it examines the relationship between the region's air quality and the transportation activities upon which its economy - indeed, the nation's economy - depends. The second topic, equally complex, is the interplay among ecosystem conditions, natural resources, and the state of the region's invaluable cultural resources such as its archaeological sites and its tribal sacred springs and mountains. For both topics, the Board's recommendations reflect its continued call for action from strong partnerships, equipped with adequate resources, that span sectors and geographic boundaries.
    The Good Neighbor Environmental Board
    March 2006

  • Drinking Water Quality in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region
    Groundwater is a major water resource along the US-Mexico border, yet SCERP or other agencies have limited information on groundwater quality. Existing data is primarily limited to salinity (i.e., total dissolved solids, conductance). This project collected several hundred samples from six Mexican states near the border (Baja California Norte, Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, Tamaulipas) from public connections to drinking water systems (i.e., this is the water people are drinking). A large number of these community water systems are supplied with groundwater, although several larger cities also have access to surface waters which after treatment are used for drinking water. Water quality analysis during this project focused on chemical constituents, and could serve as a model for a follow-up study on microbial water quality in groundwater. The goal of this project was to develop an understanding for broad geographical distribution in Mexico of public drinking water quality. Most drinking water originates as groundwater.
    Southwest Consortium for Environmental Research & Policy
    February 17, 2006 [Last Updated]


  • Children's Health and the Environment in North America: A First Report on Available Indicators and Measures - Country Report: Mexico
    One of the goals of this report is to focus on one of these factors: chemical releases into the environment from industrial activities. Chemical industrial releases are one important part of the puzzle but do not give a full picture of risk since chemicals from industry are only one type of pollutant. Human exposure levels to these chemicals, and other sources of pollution, are beyond the scope of this report.

    This report also aims to foster increased trilateral action to prevent and reduce children's exposure to harmful chemicals. Its focus is an analysis of available data on one category of pollutant, toxic chemicals from data obtained from the national pollutant release and transfer registers (PRTRs) in North America, and emphasizes the reporting of chemical carcinogens, developmental toxicants and neurotoxicants. Although at this stage the data are available only for the United States and Canada, this report discusses in specific terms the potential impacts of these substances on the health of children in North America. It also describes the limits of what we know about these impacts based on present data. With its cross-border analysis of selected PRTR data, it provides a unique North American perspective as a basis for trilateral action.
    Mexico's Ministry of Health
    December 2005
  • The Real ID Act and San Diego-Tijuana Border Fencing: The New Politics of Security and Border Environmental Protection
    On May 11, 2005, President George W. Bush signed a most inaptly named piece of legislation, the Real ID Act of 2005, into law (PL109-13). With a stroke of the presidential pen important achievements in environmental protection along the U.S.-Mexican border were thrust into jeopardy. Remarkably, aside from a small set of local environmental activists, this bill, H.R. 1268 in its final form, H.R. 418 in the original, passed into law with scarcely a peep from national environmental groups, or border level organizations outside the San Diego area. This was not for lack of serious concern once the deed was done. The truth is, environmental groups had been caught napping or, more accurately, preoccupied, with other battles. They were outflanked by a clever maneuver in the House Rules Committee and stymied politically by arguments for homelandCread borderCsecurity. And the U.S.-Mexican border is worse for it.
    By Stephen P. Mumme, Colorado State University
    November 2005

  • Healthy Border 2010: An Agenda for Improving Health on the U.S.-Mexico Border
    The Healthy Border Program was established as the United States-Mexico Border Health Commission's binational agenda of health promotion and disease prevention in March of 2001. The program is based on the framework of Healthy People 2010 and incorporates the United States Healthy Gente Program and Mexico's Indicadores de Resultado (National Health Indicators). The framework of Healthy Border 2010 is composed of 20 health objectives held in 11 focus areas.
    U.S.-Mexico Border Health Commission
    October 2003


  • The U.S.-Mexico Border Diabetes Prevention and Control Project
    The goal of the U.S.-Mexico Border Diabetes Prevention and Control Project is to reduce the impact of diabetes on the residents living along the U.S.-Mexico border, through a model of participation and shared leadership along the border region.
    Pan American Health Organization
    2003
  • Energy Issues in the Calfiornia-Baja California Binational Region
    It is our vision that the quality of life for residents in the California-Baja California binational region will be greatly improved by the development of safe, reliable, affordable and clean sources of energy.... One way to achieve this vision is to better understand the dynamics and realities of cross border energy markets as they exist in the border region consisting of San Diego and Imperial Counties and northern Baja California. Energy is an indispensable lifeblood's of the region. It makes homes and businesses comfortable, moves people and goods, operates the machinery of industry and powers the infrastructure that underpins the region's communities. This pervasive role makes energy a key issue in the binational region's future. Energy choices made today will have significant effects on tomorrow's economy, environment and quality of life.
    Border Energy Strategy Committee
    November 2002

  • U.S.-Mexico Border Five Year Outlook (2001 Edition)
    Spanning more than 2,000 miles from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean, the U.S.-Mexico border region (100 km. or 62 mi. on each side of the border) is home to about 12 million people. Rapidly increasing population and industrialization in the border cities over several decades continue to overwhelm existing wastewater, water supply, and solid waste infrastructure. Untreated or partially treated domestic and industrial sewage flows to surface water are common along the border. In addition, thousands of residents on both sides of the border lack safe drinking water and adequate solid waste disposal facilities.
    North American Development Bank
    2001


  • Mortality Profiles of the Sister Communities on the United States - Mexico Border
    The border between the United States and Mexico delimits four states of the United States (California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas) and six states of Mexico (Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas). It stretches from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico-a distance of more than 2,000 miles (3,400 km). According to the 1990 censuses of both countries, the total population of the border region is estimated at 9.1 million persons distributed in 24 counties of the United States (5.2 million) and 39 municipalities of Mexico (3.9 million). The populations on both sides of the border actively interact with one another, and their interdependence, for purposes of public health, requires that the border region be looked at as one geographic region with an interworking of local, state, and national governments.
    Pan American Health Organization
    2000

  • Prevention of Childhood Toxic Lead Exposure in a U.S.-Mexico Border Community
    Childhood lead exposure is an endemic health problem on the U.S.-Mexican border. The average incidence rate of elevated blood lead levels in low-income children in El Paso County was 7.7% in 1995. Among low-income children residing in colonias and decayed urban areas the rates are as high as 10 percent (Texas Department of Health 1995). The disproportionate risk endured by these children is quantifiable only on the U.S. side of the border.
    Southwest Consortium for Environmental Research & Policy
    By Maria Alvarez Amaya
    2000

Rule of Law and Security

  • Videoteca Jurídica Virtual
    El Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas de la UNAM ha iniciado el proyecto de Videoteca Juridica Virtual para poner al alcance de los estudiosos del derecho una serie de materiales que estima indispensables. A lo largo de los años la experiencia de los investigadores del instituto que participan en actividades docentes en diversas partes del país ha confirmado la escasez de este tipo de materiales disponibles en las instituciones públicas, incluso universitarias, para realizar estudios de derecho, por ello, aprovechando el desarrollo tecnológico, se ha emprendido este proyecto que tiene como fin facilitar el acceso a diversos materiales.
    Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas, UNAM

  • ICESI 8 - Victimización, incidencia y cifra negra en México
    Police records are “social constructions” and fluctuate with many non-criminal factors (community tolerance, police competence, police corruption, record-keeping error etc.) In Mexico, this data is notoriously weak, invalid and unreliable. To a lesser degree, these same all factors affect American and Canadian data. In Mexico, basic homicide counts are reported by major newspapers such as Reforma, Milenio and El Universal. A general picture of violence and homicide in Mexico has been prepared by David Shirk of the TransBorder Institute ( Shirk, D. (2010). Drug Violence in Mexico: Data and Analysis from 2001-2009. San Diego, CA, Trans-Border Institute, University of San Diego: 20.)

    Victimization surveys are regularly done under the sponsorship of the US DOJ, and are occasionally done in Canada as part of a General Social Survey. In Mexico, ICESI has been conducting a Victimization survey for the past few years. Victimization surveys cannot measure some types of crime (e.g. Homicide), and generally don’t ask about other criminal acts that may lead to charges against the respondent (e.g. Drug use). Victimization surveys. Victimization surveys may be invalidated by a phenomenon called “telescoping” (the period of the crime is often not limited to the current period of comparison) and are may be unreliable because there are different personal intepretations about some crime events.
    Instituto ciudadano de estudios sobre la inseguridad a.c., ICESI

  • Justice in Mexico Project
    This is the main website of the Justice in Mexico Project - A research project by the USD Trans-Border Institute (TBI) dedicated to the rule of law and justice reform in Mexico. The TBI Justice in Mexico Project coordinates and disseminates research on three major components of the rule of law: (1) order; (2) accountability and; (3) Equal access to justice. The Justice in Mexico Project focuses on the status of the rule of law at the sub-national level and on reforms in the administration of justice across Mexican states. This website is meant to serve as a tool for the dissemination of information and publications related to this project.
    University of San Diego, Trans-Border Institute

  • Gun Trafficking and the Southwest Border
    According to the Department of Justice, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) is the lead federal agency responsible for stopping the illegal flow of firearms, or gun trafficking, from the United States to Mexico. ATF has developed a nationwide strategy to reduce firearms trafficking and violent crime by seeking to prevent convicted felons, drug traffickers, and juvenile gang members from acquiring firearms from gun traffickers. This report includes legal analyses of three ATF-investigated, Southwest border gun trafficking cases to illustrate the federal statutes that are typically violated as part of wider gun trafficking schemes. The report also examines anti-gun trafficking proposals introduced in the 110th Congress. So far, no similar proposals have been introduced in the 111th Congress. The report concludes with possible policy questions for Congress regarding the magnitude of Southwest border gun trafficking, the use and significance of ATF crime gun trace data, the possible ratification of an Inter-American Gun Trafficking Convention (CIFTA), and the adequacy of the federal statutes designed to deter and reduce illegal gun trafficking.
    Congressional Research Service
    By Vivian S. Chu and William J. Krouse
    July 29, 2009


  • Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: Assessing the Implementation of Mexico’s Freedom of Information Act
    This article discusses Mexico’s transition to a more transparent form of government discussing the most significant government transparency laws and regulations. These efforts toward transparency in government are meant to reduce corruption and ensure human rights by keeping the public informed of every step the government makes. The benefits of this new form of government are global because this serves as an example for other developing nations. Though there are still many aspects that need improvement, the results, thus far, have been positive. This article focuses on the law structure, achievements to date, and future prospects.
    Insituto de Investigaciones Juridicas UNAM
    By Zachary Bookman and Juan-Pablo Guerrero Amparán
    June 2009
  • An Overview of Mexico’s System of Legal Education
    This article is about Mexico’s system of legal education. This presents research of formal and informal ways of legal education in institutions of higher education in Mexico. The article focuses on three aspects of the structure of legal education in Mexico: a) the procedure to obtain the license to practice law; b) the content and structure of the law degree programs; and c) the increase in the number of law degree programs, focusing on the causes and characteristics of this growth.
    Insituto de Investigaciones Juridicas UNAM
    By Luis Fernando Péez Hurtado
    June 2009

  • The Concept of Jurisprudencia in Mexican Law
    This note describes the concept of jurisprudencia in Mexican law. This term refers to constant and unvarying criteria to interpret and apply the Constitution, federal and state statutes and rulings and international treaties, expressed in the decisions of either the Supreme of Justice sitting en banc or of one of its Chambers, the collegiate circuit courts, as well as the Federal Electoral Tribunal. After meeting certain conditions and requirements analyzed below, the decisions issued by these courts may acquire binding authority with regard to lower courts. The notion of Jurisprudencia has certain similarities with the common law notion of precendent, however, as made evident below, there are important differences between the two concepts.
    Insituto de Investigaciones Juridicas UNAM
    By José María Serna de la Garza
    June 2009

  • Global Citizenship for the 21st Century
    This essay gives an explanation about the citizens in the early twenty first century, making an extensive discussion of several schools of thought, going from Leopoldo Zea to Rosseau. The essay analyzes the term citizens and the effects that it has had from the times of Plato and Aristotle, giving specific examples. The essays will also analyze Eco’s school of thought in regards to the differences between migration and immigration, along with the existing debt arising from the British, French, and American revolutions in terms of equality.
    Insituto de Investigaciones Juridicas UNAM
    By Diego Valadés
    June 2009
  • Hispanics and the Criminal Justice System: Low Confidence, High Exposure
    Latinos' confidence in the U.S. criminal justice system is closer to the relatively low levels expressed by blacks than to the higher levels expressed by whites, according to a pair of nationwide surveys by the Pew Research Center. Six-in-ten (61%) Hispanics say they have a great deal or a fair amount of confidence that the police in their communities will do a good job enforcing the law, compared with 78% of whites and 55% of blacks. Fewer than half of Latinos say they are confident that Hispanics will be treated fairly by the courts (49%) and police officers (45%).           
    Pew Hispanic Center
    By Mark Hugo Lopez and Gretchen Livingston
    April 7, 2009

  • Mexico’s Drug War
    In recent years, Mexico's drug cartels have waged increasingly violent battles with one another as well as with the Mexican government. Upon taking office in December 2006, Mexican President Felipe Calderon deployed thousands of federal troops in an aggressive crackdown on drug-related violence. Yet death tolls continue to rise. There were more than 2,500 drug-related deaths in 2007, and the yearly toll rose to more than 4,000 by the end of 2008. Murders and street gun battles are only part of a more entrenched problem that includes corrupt police forces and a lackluster judiciary. Experts say recent police and judicial reforms are a step in the right direction, but such reforms will take time to implement. Meanwhile, increased and sustained cooperation from the United States is seen as necessary to stem drug-related violence.
    Council on Foreign Relations
    By Aimee Rawlins
    November 2008

  • Security and Intelligence in U.S.-Mexico Relations
    The relationship between Mexico and the United States has been defined by the countries' shared border, their economic interaction (which has been growing since the signing of NAFTA), and by their common geopolitical arena. In terms of security, the relationship has been defined by like-minded priorities and interests; however, these factors have not necessarily led to a formal alliance between the two countries nor a joint strategy in the face of potential threats. This characteristic of the relationship is evidenced by the absence of defense agreements and the lack of joint military exercises.
    Woodrow Wilson Center
    By Luis Herrera-Lasso M.
    February 26, 2007
  • Laws without justice: Human rights violations and impunity in the public security and criminal justice system
    Amnesty International hopes that the administration of Mexico's new president, Felipe Calderon, will seize the opportunity to achieve substantial and lasting progress in the protection of human rights within the country. A key challenge will be to advance some of the principal reforms to the criminal justice system proposed in 2004, but which have since remained stalled in Congress. This report examines in detail some of the failings of criminal justice system which often result in the arbitrary and unfair application of the law in Mexico, and presents recommendations to the government in five main areas: international human rights standards; public security and the criminal justice system; accountability; human rights defenders and rights of victims.
    Amnesty International Mexico
    February 7, 2007

  • Gendered Violence: Murder in the Maquiladoras
    The research presented here examines the relationship between violence towards women and participation in work in the maquiladoras along the United States-Mexico border. Women and young girls who work in the maquiladoras are subjected to sexual harassment at work and the threat of murder when they leave work. The first part of this paper discusses the background of the maquiladoras and gives a detailed description of the associated violence. The second part of this paper discusses possible motives and explanations for the violence. Therefore this paper addresses two questions: First, why are the maquiladoras the site of such gender based violence? Second, why do the murders continue? The use of sociological theory, more specifically intersectionality theory, determines the answers to these questions.
    California University of Pennsylvania
    By Katie Pantaleo
    Fall 2006

  • Crime and Law Enforcement
    Chapter excerpt taken from "At the Crossroads: U.S./Mexico Border Counties in Transition"
    The contemporary situation in southwest border counties relating to crime and law enforcement is quite different than many would expect. Consider, for example, that some of the nation's safest cities are located along the southwest border, including Tucson and El Paso. Given the link of crime to important quality of life decisions, the low rate of crime in southwest border counties, combined with attributes, such as affordable housing is part of the landscape of increasing retirement in the southwest. Since 1990, official crime statistics have recorded a dramatic drop of 30 percent (Figure 13.1). Property crimes are down 40 percent between 1990 and 2000 and violent crimes, among the lowest in the nation making up only 12 percent of all crimes, dropped 29 percent in the same decade.
    U.S./Mexico Border Counties Coalition
    March 2006
  • Public Insecurity in Mexico: Statistics and Analysis
    The Instituto Ciudadano de Estudios Sobre la Inseguridad (Citizen Institute for the Study on Insecurity, ICESI) is a civic organization sponsored by academic institutions (National University of México, UNAM; the Technologic Institute of Monterrey and Este Pais Foundation ) and the private sector (Consejo Coordinador Empresarial and COPARMEX). The ICESI has recently concluded its third "National Survey on Insecurity" (Encuesta Nacional Sobre Inseguridad, ENSI-3). This survey accounts for two major aspects of public insecurity in Mexico. First, it presents data on the personal experiences of those Mexicans that have been victims of violence. Second, the survey documents the public perception of crime and insecurity in 2004. The ENSI-3 followed the methodological recommendations of United Nations for criminal analysis.
    Análisis de Resultados, Arturo Arango Durán [ PDF (483.90 KB) ]
    The Instituto Ciudadano de Estudios Sobre la Inseguridad (Citizen Institute for the Study on Insecurity, ICESI)
    November 2005

  • Nontraditional Security Threats in the U.S.-Mexico Bilateral Relationship: Overview and Recommendations
    Before September 11, 2001, security-primarily, anti-drug trafficking efforts-ranked among the top two or three issues in Mexico-U.S. relations. Since that day, security has dominated the U.S. policy agenda in foreign affairs, including the bilateral agenda. Mexico, which had put more emphasis on migration reform, has accepted the new reality as defined by the United States. This background paper identifies some of the more pressing nontraditional security threats in the U.S.-Mexico bilateral relationship and suggests recommendations to address them. Inevitably somewhat U.S.-centric, my approach is to cover a good deal of ground in broad-brush strokes, providing only enough detail to buttress the main points and illustrate the recommendations.
    Woodrow Wilson Center
    By John Bailey, Georgetown University
    January 25, 2005


  • Human Rights, Rule of Law, and Judicial Reform in Latin America, Research Resources
    With the support of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and in collaboration with institutional partners in Chile, and especially with researchers at the Universidad Alberto Hurtado's (Santiago, Chile) Centro de Etica and the Escuela de Derecho, this project of the Center for Latin American Studies at San Diego State University involves a multidimensional program of research, publication, and multimedia dissemination of research results in the area of democratic governance and judicial reform in Chile in comparative perspective.
    Center for Latin American Studies, San Diego State University

Religion and Culture

  • Latino/a Bibliography of Theology and Religious Studies
    The online Latino/a Bibliography of Theology and Religious Studies is a project and service of the Academy of Catholic Hispanic Theologians of the U.S. (ACHTUS), designed for its members and for scholars, students and pastoral agents anywhere who need accurate, complete and frequently updated bibliographical information on and by U.S. Latino/a Catholics and Episcopalians. The user can search this bibliographical database by subject (e.g., systematic theology, pastoral theology, church history, biblical studies, etc.), author's name, year of publication, type of publication (e.g., books, articles in printed journals, chapters in collective volumes, articles in electronic journals, etc.), and keywords.
    Academy of Catholic Hispanic Theologians of the U.S. (ACHTUS)

  • A Country Study: Mexico
    This study was prepared by the Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress under the Country Studies/Area Handbook Program sponsored by the Department of the Army. This study is an attempt to examine objectively and concisely the dominant historical, social, economic, political, and military aspects of contemporary Mexico. Written by a multidisciplinary team of social scientists, the study focuses on the make up of society, their origins, dominant beliefs and values, their common interests and the issues on which they are divided, the nature and extent of their involvement with national institutions, and their attitudes toward each other and toward their social system and political order.
    The Library of Congress
    May 7, 2009

  • Tijuana and the Border: A Unique Culture
    Photo gallery by Alex Webb of Tijuana’s people and culture. Each picture includes a few facts, including statistics about what the images pertain to.
    National Geographic Society
    1996