SEARCHING FOR THE LIVING, THE DEAD, AND THE NEW DISAPPEARED ON THE MIGRANT TRAIL IN TEXAS
Preliminary Report on Migrant Deaths in South Texas
This report was written by Christine Kovic in collaboration with the Prevention of Migrant Deaths Working Group of Houston United/Houston Unido. Revised July 15, 2013.
Christine Kovic
kovic@uhcl.edu
Associate Professor of Anthropology and Cross-Cultural Studies at the University of Houston-Clear Lake, has conducted research in the field of human rights for the past 20 years. Her current research addresses the intersection of human rights and immigration to the U.S., with emphasis on Central American migrants crossing Mexico in the journey to the U.S. and on the human rights and organizing efforts of Latinos in the Houston region.
Houston United/Houston Unido
https://www.facebook.com/HoustonUnited
A coalition of community organizations, has been working to prevent border deaths, stop deportations and detentions, and achieve an immigration reform that allows workers to migrate without being criminalized.
Dark Side of a Global Community: Girl Trafficking in the Southeast of Mexicoinventionjournals
This document discusses girl trafficking in the state of Tabasco in southeastern Mexico. It finds that Tabasco is a source, transit, and destination location for trafficking girls for commercial sexual exploitation. Many girls are trafficked from Central America through Tabasco to other parts of Mexico and the United States. Five major routes used by traffickers to move victims through Tabasco are identified. The document examines the social, economic, and political factors contributing to the vulnerabilities exploited by traffickers in the region.
This document summarizes a conference held in 2014 between Mexican and US anthropologists to explore transborder themes affecting communities and social processes from both sides of the border. Key topics discussed include differences between applied vs activist anthropology in Mexico and the US, and the need to build a regional, transborder perspective that moves beyond national boundaries. The goal was to initiate collaborative discussions and comparative research to address issues from both Mexican and US perspectives.
Indigenous women in Latin America and inequalities access to justiceChirine Haddad ?
Indigenous women in Latin America face significant barriers to accessing justice. They experience high rates of violence, including domestic violence, violence by state actors like the military and police, and violence by non-state groups involved in resource extraction. Indigenous women also experience high levels of poverty. They have lower education levels and face pressure to leave school to help with domestic and agricultural work, perpetuating the cycle of poverty. The barriers of violence, discrimination, and poverty indigenous women face in Latin America undermine their ability to access fair treatment and remedies through the justice system.
Violence contre les Femmes et Filles en Haiti dfid report 2013Stanley Lucas
There are various cultural, political and economic drivers of violence against women and girls in Haiti. They include the following. Gender stereotypes and discrimination against women: Researchers stress that the incidence of violence in the post-earthquake period should be understood in the context of the longer-term social exclusion, and cultural and legal discrimination against women. Women’s economic dependency: There is some evidence that women who are economically dependent on men are more vulnerable to sexual exploitation. Poverty, displacement and poor conditions in internally displaced persons’ (IDP) camps: Studies indicate significant correlations between limited access to adequate food, water and sanitation, and women and girls’ vulnerability to sexual violence in IDP camps. Legacy of state-led violence: Politically motivated violence has been used by some regimes in Haiti. Culture of impunity and weak capacity in the state justice system: An acute lack of resources and capacity in the Haitian justice system makes it difficult for the state to prosecute and punish perpetrators, and deters victims from seeking redress.
The document summarizes the efforts of the Center for Reproductive Rights to protect access to abortion in the United States. It discusses how a Texas law led to the closure of many abortion clinics overnight, forcing thousands of women to go without access to safe abortion care. The Center filed an emergency petition to reopen some clinics and introduced federal legislation. After generating interest, a key Senate hearing was held on the proposed Women's Health Protection Act.
This document provides a standard operating plan for a Family Assistance Center (FAC) in the event of a mass fatality incident. It outlines the mission and goals of the FAC, which is to provide support to families of victims by addressing their informational, psychological, and logistical needs in a secure environment. The plan details considerations for staffing, facility layout, collecting victim information, implementing security, and demobilizing the FAC. The maximum number of victims planned for is 30, with 6 family members allowed per victim. The FAC will be staffed by various roles including Family Assistance Representatives, Antemortem Data Interviewers, and administrative support.
In 2015, the world pledged to ‘leave no one behind’ as part of the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development. But millions of people are left behind in humanitarian crises.
Precise figures remain elusive (given measuring need is an inexact art), but the UN Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs’ Global Humanitarian Overview (OCHA,
2018a) estimates that some 134 million people will require humanitarian assistance worldwide
in 2018. It further estimates that approximately 97 million people would be selected
for international assistance under the joint humanitarian response plans, leaving a 27% gap
which would only be partially met by domestic authorities or other organizations including
the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement1
. In a number of the major
operations of 2017, fewer than half of the people estimated to be in need were actually
known to be reached by internationally supported humanitarian assistance.
Dark Side of a Global Community: Girl Trafficking in the Southeast of Mexicoinventionjournals
This document discusses girl trafficking in the state of Tabasco in southeastern Mexico. It finds that Tabasco is a source, transit, and destination location for trafficking girls for commercial sexual exploitation. Many girls are trafficked from Central America through Tabasco to other parts of Mexico and the United States. Five major routes used by traffickers to move victims through Tabasco are identified. The document examines the social, economic, and political factors contributing to the vulnerabilities exploited by traffickers in the region.
This document summarizes a conference held in 2014 between Mexican and US anthropologists to explore transborder themes affecting communities and social processes from both sides of the border. Key topics discussed include differences between applied vs activist anthropology in Mexico and the US, and the need to build a regional, transborder perspective that moves beyond national boundaries. The goal was to initiate collaborative discussions and comparative research to address issues from both Mexican and US perspectives.
Indigenous women in Latin America and inequalities access to justiceChirine Haddad ?
Indigenous women in Latin America face significant barriers to accessing justice. They experience high rates of violence, including domestic violence, violence by state actors like the military and police, and violence by non-state groups involved in resource extraction. Indigenous women also experience high levels of poverty. They have lower education levels and face pressure to leave school to help with domestic and agricultural work, perpetuating the cycle of poverty. The barriers of violence, discrimination, and poverty indigenous women face in Latin America undermine their ability to access fair treatment and remedies through the justice system.
Violence contre les Femmes et Filles en Haiti dfid report 2013Stanley Lucas
There are various cultural, political and economic drivers of violence against women and girls in Haiti. They include the following. Gender stereotypes and discrimination against women: Researchers stress that the incidence of violence in the post-earthquake period should be understood in the context of the longer-term social exclusion, and cultural and legal discrimination against women. Women’s economic dependency: There is some evidence that women who are economically dependent on men are more vulnerable to sexual exploitation. Poverty, displacement and poor conditions in internally displaced persons’ (IDP) camps: Studies indicate significant correlations between limited access to adequate food, water and sanitation, and women and girls’ vulnerability to sexual violence in IDP camps. Legacy of state-led violence: Politically motivated violence has been used by some regimes in Haiti. Culture of impunity and weak capacity in the state justice system: An acute lack of resources and capacity in the Haitian justice system makes it difficult for the state to prosecute and punish perpetrators, and deters victims from seeking redress.
The document summarizes the efforts of the Center for Reproductive Rights to protect access to abortion in the United States. It discusses how a Texas law led to the closure of many abortion clinics overnight, forcing thousands of women to go without access to safe abortion care. The Center filed an emergency petition to reopen some clinics and introduced federal legislation. After generating interest, a key Senate hearing was held on the proposed Women's Health Protection Act.
This document provides a standard operating plan for a Family Assistance Center (FAC) in the event of a mass fatality incident. It outlines the mission and goals of the FAC, which is to provide support to families of victims by addressing their informational, psychological, and logistical needs in a secure environment. The plan details considerations for staffing, facility layout, collecting victim information, implementing security, and demobilizing the FAC. The maximum number of victims planned for is 30, with 6 family members allowed per victim. The FAC will be staffed by various roles including Family Assistance Representatives, Antemortem Data Interviewers, and administrative support.
In 2015, the world pledged to ‘leave no one behind’ as part of the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development. But millions of people are left behind in humanitarian crises.
Precise figures remain elusive (given measuring need is an inexact art), but the UN Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs’ Global Humanitarian Overview (OCHA,
2018a) estimates that some 134 million people will require humanitarian assistance worldwide
in 2018. It further estimates that approximately 97 million people would be selected
for international assistance under the joint humanitarian response plans, leaving a 27% gap
which would only be partially met by domestic authorities or other organizations including
the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement1
. In a number of the major
operations of 2017, fewer than half of the people estimated to be in need were actually
known to be reached by internationally supported humanitarian assistance.
The document discusses branding Toronto and developing a competitive identity for the city on the global stage. It analyzes Toronto's current image and perceptions, both internally and externally. Internally, Torontonians lack a strong sense of "Torontoness" and the city's image is blurred. Externally, Toronto is perceived as just another North American city and its image is closely tied to Canada's outdated nature-focused brand. The document recommends developing a brand that emphasizes Toronto's uniqueness as a "genuinely global" city to strengthen its global reputation and attract tourism, investment, and talent.
Kamal Kishore is seeking an opportunity to join an internet marketing team where he can utilize his experience. He has over 7 years of experience in online marketing roles, including associate manager at Vistaprint where he drove over $65k in bookings and reduced costs by over 100%. He holds certificates in Google Adwords and Microsoft programs and has managed paid search, social media, and display advertising campaigns across several industries.
This document provides a parking map for the UTSA main campus for Spring 2011. Key information includes:
- Construction begins for the East Garage near the North Garage and Lots 3 and 4.
- The map labels all parking lots and garages, including locations for faculty/staff, student, visitor, and permit parking.
- A legend identifies buildings, construction projects, and other landmarks on campus.
The document provides 15 tips for maximizing networking opportunities at conferences from Keith Ferrazzi. The tips include proper planning, identifying targets to meet, researching those individuals beforehand, contacting them before the event, finding a "wingman" for accountability, introducing oneself during Q&A sessions, making commitments to follow up after the event, and avoiding becoming overly focused on any single speaker or individual. The overall goal is to be a "Conference Commando" who makes the most of every opportunity rather than just attending passively.
The Alliance for Prosperity Plan (APP), implemented in 2014 to address Central American migration, has failed to stem migration flows. Over 60% of APP funding supports security measures by corrupt governments, rather than development programs. Rising violence in Northern Triangle countries has led to increased migration, despite claims by US officials that enforcement policies are effective. The APP also ties funding to neoliberal economic reforms promoted by CAFTA-DR, which have exacerbated inequality, violence, and emigration. The APP budget needs reorientation towards reducing violence, strengthening communities, and creating jobs in order to actually decrease migration from Central America.
El Obispo Elizondo y el arzobispo Gómez le recuerdan al gobierno y a ICE que las acciones de control que provocan que las familias vivan permanente temor van en contra de los antiguos valores de los Estados Unidos de América y amenazan la dignidad divina de cada persona.
La carta de enero de 2016 se encuentra (en inglés)
Our_Communities_in_Crisis_Central_America_ReportStacy Martin
The ELCA delegation traveled to Honduras and El Salvador to understand the root causes of migration from Central America to the US. They found that people flee due to extreme violence, poverty, lack of opportunities, and environmental issues. Government institutions in the region have failed to ensure safety, resulting in constant fear among communities. While numbers of arrivals to the US have decreased, migration within the region has increased. The delegation also examined the repatriation process for returned migrants, which varies in support between Honduras and El Salvador.
ABOUT THIS REPORT
This initial report was produced by Institute for Policy Studies staff in support of the Poor People’s Campaign: A
National Call for Moral Revival (www.PoorPeoplesCampaign.org). This campaign, marking the 50th anniversary of
the Poor People’s Campaign led by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and other leaders, aims to build a broad and
deep national movement rooted in the leadership of the poor and dispossessed as moral agents and reflecting the
great moral teachings to unite our country around a transformative agenda to combat poverty, racism, militarism,
and ecological devastation. We worked in collaboration with the Co-Chairs of the Poor People’s Campaign, Rev. Dr.
William J. Barber, II and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, and the Tri-Chairs of the Campaign's Audit Committee, Rev. Dr.
James Forbes, Dr. Tim Tyson, and Shailly Gupta Barnes.
In the coming months, the Institute for Policy Studies will work with the Poor People’s Campaign to conduct a much
more in-depth “audit” of the structural and systemic causes for what Dr. King called the “Triplets of Evil” — racism,
extreme materialism, and militarism — as well as the interrelated problem of ecological destruction. To learn lessons
for today, we will be hearing testimony and interviewing leaders who’ve been in the middle of the key struggles
for progress of the past 50 years. This analysis will feed into the new Poor People’s Campaign’s efforts to advance
structural solutions to the multiple crises of today.
A presentation for the 2014 Catechetical Congress on Long Island regarding the immigration issue and the impact it has on immigrant families on Long Island. It also suggest a pastoral response to this community.
The document analyzes the scope and cultural impact of mass incarceration in the United States. It notes that the U.S. has the largest incarcerated population in the world, with disproportionate rates of imprisonment for African Americans. Upon release, former prisoners often struggle with lack of job prospects, housing, and civil rights disenfranchisement. The document calls for comprehensive reform addressing both policy and programs to help with prisoner reentry and reduce recidivism rates.
Article CORONAVIRUS IN TEXAS Across Texas and the nation, th.docxrossskuddershamus
Article
CORONAVIRUS IN TEXAS
Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for people of color
New data on Texas coronavirus fatalities reveals stark racial disparities.
BY EMMA PLATOFF AND CARLA ASTUDILLO
Juan Lopez wheels a stretcher out of the back of his vehicle in the early morning in McAllen. Lopez is picking up the body o…
Juan Lopez wheels a stretcher out of the back of his vehicle in McAllen. Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for communities of color and low-income communities. Credit: Miguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas Tribune
Correction: On July 30, the state said an “automation error” caused approximately 225 deaths to be incorrectly added to the overall death count; a subsequent quality check by Department of State Health Services epidemiologists revealed COVID-19 was not the direct cause of death in these cases. The numbers and charts in this story have been updated to account for this error and are current as of July 30.
Texas ’southernmost county, Cameron, is home to just 1.5% of the state’s population, but it accounts for nearly 5% of its known COVID-19 fatalities.
Cameron County - where 89% of residents are Hispanic and nearly a third live below the poverty line - stands out as just one stark example of widespread disparities in COVID-19 outcomes. Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for communities of color and low-income communities.
These disparities, and a wealth of other demographic information, became more apparent this week when new tallying methods at the state health agency revealed a more complete picture of who has died in Texas and where. Trends showing that Black and Hispanic individuals had been disproportionately hit by the virus were clear nationally and apparent in local snapshots, but until earlier this week, the Texas Department of State Health Services ’limited demographic data had clouded the picture of those statewide disparities.
The Texas Tribune thanks its sponsors. Become one.
Hispanic Texans make up about 40% of the state’s population, but they account for 49% of its known COVID-19 fatalities. Black Texans also appear slightly overrepresented in the fatality toll, representing 14% of fatalities but just 12% of the state population. Texas reported a total of 6,274 fatalities Thursday evening.
By contrast, white and Asian Texans died at lower rates relative to their share of the state’s population.
Sometimes called the great equalizer, the novel coronavirus has been anything but - a deadly reality in a state like Texas, where the Hispanic population is expected to become the largest group in the state by mid-2021.
The disparities should not have been a surprise, said Jamboor Vishwanatha, director of the Texas Center for Health Disparities at the University of North Texas Health Science Center.
Need to keep tabs on the latest coronavirus news in Texas? Our evening roundup has .
The document discusses how increased border enforcement and immigration policies since the 1980s have disproportionately impacted women. Stricter border patrols have encouraged migrant workers to settle permanently in the US with their families instead of seasonal work. However, deportations have overwhelmingly targeted unauthorized immigrant men, leaving women as single parents struggling economically in a hostile environment without support. The document argues this is an overlooked feminist issue and that reform is needed to prevent further harm to immigrant families and women.
This document discusses several issues related to illegal immigration, including:
1) Illegal immigration poses challenges to a nation's legal policies, culture, and sovereignty. If left unchecked, it could destabilize a country and erase its history and traditions.
2) Illegal immigration is a global problem, as people move across borders in search of better opportunities. Several European and Western nations face large immigrant populations that are changing their demographics and cultures.
3) California has experienced a large increase in illegal immigration and its Hispanic population is growing rapidly, changing the state's demographics and culture. If trends continue, Hispanics will become the majority in California.
4) There are reasonable arguments on both sides of the
This document provides a summary of the historical context of migrant communities and education in the United States. It discusses programs that brought migrant workers to the US such as the Bracero Program from 1942-1964 which brought over 4.6 million Mexican workers. It also discusses challenges migrant students face such as academic and parental involvement challenges. The document concludes by discussing support programs for migrants including the High School Equivalency Program and College Assistance Migrant Program.
This document provides a summary of the challenges faced by migrant communities and students in the United States. It discusses the historical context of migrant worker programs such as the Bracero Program and current H-2A programs. It also examines challenges migrant students face such as academic and parental involvement barriers. The document concludes by outlining support programs that aim to help migrant students, including High School Equivalency Programs and the College Assistance Migrant Program.
This document discusses the history and foundations of the environmental justice movement. It defines environmental racism as the placement of low-income or minority communities near environmentally hazardous areas like toxic waste. The foundations of the US, including genocide, slavery, and white supremacy, institutionalized the domination of white people over other groups and the environment. Examples of environmental injustices include unequal treatment in regulations, siting pollution burdens in some communities while excluding them from benefits, and decisions reflecting broader racial biases. The movement advocates for fair treatment and meaningful participation of all people in environmental policy regardless of race or income. Indigenous groups have long been at the forefront of these issues.
CLINICAL SCHOLARSHIPTransnational Mothers Crossing the Bor.docxmonicafrancis71118
CLINICAL SCHOLARSHIP
Transnational Mothers Crossing the Border and Bringing
Their Health Care Needs
Rosa Maria Sternberg, PhD, RN1 & Charlotte Barry, PhD, RN2
1 Post Doctoral Fellow, Family Health Care Nursing, University of California, San Francisco, CA
2 Professor and Master Teacher, Florida Atlantic University, Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing, Boca Raton, FL
Key words
Transnational mothers, Latina immigrants,
women migrating, family separation
Correspondence
Dr. Rosa Maria Sternberg, University of
California—San Francisco, 181 Rudgear Dr.,
Walnut Creek, CA 94596. E-mail:
[email protected]
Accepted December 5, 2010
doi: 10.1111/j.1547-5069.2010.01383.x
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the experiences of transna-
tional Latina mothers who immigrated to the United States without legal doc-
umentation or their children.
Design: The study used a qualitative approach to collect data from eight
transnational Latina mothers from South Florida during the summer of 2009.
Methods: Data were collected using open-ended questions in one-on-one, in-
depth interviews that lasted 1 to 2 hr.
Findings: A hermeneutic phenomenological analysis of the data yielded seven
essential themes from the participants’ stories: living in extreme poverty,
having hope, choosing to walk away from poverty, suffering through the trip
to and across the border, mothering from afar, valuing family, and changing
personally.
Conclusions: The results indicate that transnational Latina mothers find
meaning in mothering from afar through embodied sacrifice, suffering, hop-
ing for a better life for their children, and family reunification. These results
have implications for healthcare providers, social workers, policy makers, and
educators whose professional responsibility is to advocate for, and to enhance
the health and social well-being of, transnational mothers.
Clinical Relevance: Although this study focused on transnational Latina
mothers in the United States, transnational motherhood is a worldwide phe-
nomenon. Healthcare professionals play an instrumental role in providing cul-
turally specific and evidence-based care to women who migrate without their
children.
Illegal immigration is a worldwide concern precipitated
by the changes that nations have made to control the
numbers and origin of the immigrants they admit. Al-
though global efforts to control residency have defined
world history for over a century, contemporary attempts
have proved largely ineffective. Illegal immigrants are liv-
ing and working the world over, despite new laws and
regulations (Dwyer, 2004).
In the United States, the passage of the U.S. Immigra-
tion and Nationality Act of 1965 eliminated national ori-
gin quotas and gave preference to close relatives of U.S.
citizens, refugees, and individuals with certain skills. This
law paved the way for a massive influx of immigrants
from Asia and Latin America, and by the year 2000, over
20 million new immigrants.
The document discusses how US Senators have begun asking ambassador nominees about their commitment to raising LGBT human rights issues with foreign governments. Some nominees, like the ambassadors to Honduras and Senegal, have pledged to meet with LGBT communities and officials to discuss human rights abuses and promote tolerance. The ambassador to Ghana also committed to meeting with LGBT leaders and officials to discuss protecting rights to life, liberty, and happiness. By encouraging ambassadors to prepare for questions about LGBT issues, progress is being made in raising awareness of such issues globally.
Immigrant Services Network of Austin Overview of Unaccompanied Alien Children...Angela-Jo Touza - Medina
This document summarizes a presentation on unaccompanied alien children (UACs) given to the Interfaith Shared Network of Austin (ISNA). It discusses the history of UAC treatment, current issues, and next steps. There has always been UAC migration but approaches have changed over time. Currently, more UACs are coming from Central America rather than Mexico. Legal representation, healthcare, education, and family reunification assistance are needed locally. Going forward, ISNA plans to coordinate agencies to address needs and pursue sustainable funding solutions.
The document discusses branding Toronto and developing a competitive identity for the city on the global stage. It analyzes Toronto's current image and perceptions, both internally and externally. Internally, Torontonians lack a strong sense of "Torontoness" and the city's image is blurred. Externally, Toronto is perceived as just another North American city and its image is closely tied to Canada's outdated nature-focused brand. The document recommends developing a brand that emphasizes Toronto's uniqueness as a "genuinely global" city to strengthen its global reputation and attract tourism, investment, and talent.
Kamal Kishore is seeking an opportunity to join an internet marketing team where he can utilize his experience. He has over 7 years of experience in online marketing roles, including associate manager at Vistaprint where he drove over $65k in bookings and reduced costs by over 100%. He holds certificates in Google Adwords and Microsoft programs and has managed paid search, social media, and display advertising campaigns across several industries.
This document provides a parking map for the UTSA main campus for Spring 2011. Key information includes:
- Construction begins for the East Garage near the North Garage and Lots 3 and 4.
- The map labels all parking lots and garages, including locations for faculty/staff, student, visitor, and permit parking.
- A legend identifies buildings, construction projects, and other landmarks on campus.
The document provides 15 tips for maximizing networking opportunities at conferences from Keith Ferrazzi. The tips include proper planning, identifying targets to meet, researching those individuals beforehand, contacting them before the event, finding a "wingman" for accountability, introducing oneself during Q&A sessions, making commitments to follow up after the event, and avoiding becoming overly focused on any single speaker or individual. The overall goal is to be a "Conference Commando" who makes the most of every opportunity rather than just attending passively.
The Alliance for Prosperity Plan (APP), implemented in 2014 to address Central American migration, has failed to stem migration flows. Over 60% of APP funding supports security measures by corrupt governments, rather than development programs. Rising violence in Northern Triangle countries has led to increased migration, despite claims by US officials that enforcement policies are effective. The APP also ties funding to neoliberal economic reforms promoted by CAFTA-DR, which have exacerbated inequality, violence, and emigration. The APP budget needs reorientation towards reducing violence, strengthening communities, and creating jobs in order to actually decrease migration from Central America.
El Obispo Elizondo y el arzobispo Gómez le recuerdan al gobierno y a ICE que las acciones de control que provocan que las familias vivan permanente temor van en contra de los antiguos valores de los Estados Unidos de América y amenazan la dignidad divina de cada persona.
La carta de enero de 2016 se encuentra (en inglés)
Our_Communities_in_Crisis_Central_America_ReportStacy Martin
The ELCA delegation traveled to Honduras and El Salvador to understand the root causes of migration from Central America to the US. They found that people flee due to extreme violence, poverty, lack of opportunities, and environmental issues. Government institutions in the region have failed to ensure safety, resulting in constant fear among communities. While numbers of arrivals to the US have decreased, migration within the region has increased. The delegation also examined the repatriation process for returned migrants, which varies in support between Honduras and El Salvador.
ABOUT THIS REPORT
This initial report was produced by Institute for Policy Studies staff in support of the Poor People’s Campaign: A
National Call for Moral Revival (www.PoorPeoplesCampaign.org). This campaign, marking the 50th anniversary of
the Poor People’s Campaign led by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and other leaders, aims to build a broad and
deep national movement rooted in the leadership of the poor and dispossessed as moral agents and reflecting the
great moral teachings to unite our country around a transformative agenda to combat poverty, racism, militarism,
and ecological devastation. We worked in collaboration with the Co-Chairs of the Poor People’s Campaign, Rev. Dr.
William J. Barber, II and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, and the Tri-Chairs of the Campaign's Audit Committee, Rev. Dr.
James Forbes, Dr. Tim Tyson, and Shailly Gupta Barnes.
In the coming months, the Institute for Policy Studies will work with the Poor People’s Campaign to conduct a much
more in-depth “audit” of the structural and systemic causes for what Dr. King called the “Triplets of Evil” — racism,
extreme materialism, and militarism — as well as the interrelated problem of ecological destruction. To learn lessons
for today, we will be hearing testimony and interviewing leaders who’ve been in the middle of the key struggles
for progress of the past 50 years. This analysis will feed into the new Poor People’s Campaign’s efforts to advance
structural solutions to the multiple crises of today.
A presentation for the 2014 Catechetical Congress on Long Island regarding the immigration issue and the impact it has on immigrant families on Long Island. It also suggest a pastoral response to this community.
The document analyzes the scope and cultural impact of mass incarceration in the United States. It notes that the U.S. has the largest incarcerated population in the world, with disproportionate rates of imprisonment for African Americans. Upon release, former prisoners often struggle with lack of job prospects, housing, and civil rights disenfranchisement. The document calls for comprehensive reform addressing both policy and programs to help with prisoner reentry and reduce recidivism rates.
Article CORONAVIRUS IN TEXAS Across Texas and the nation, th.docxrossskuddershamus
Article
CORONAVIRUS IN TEXAS
Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for people of color
New data on Texas coronavirus fatalities reveals stark racial disparities.
BY EMMA PLATOFF AND CARLA ASTUDILLO
Juan Lopez wheels a stretcher out of the back of his vehicle in the early morning in McAllen. Lopez is picking up the body o…
Juan Lopez wheels a stretcher out of the back of his vehicle in McAllen. Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for communities of color and low-income communities. Credit: Miguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas Tribune
Correction: On July 30, the state said an “automation error” caused approximately 225 deaths to be incorrectly added to the overall death count; a subsequent quality check by Department of State Health Services epidemiologists revealed COVID-19 was not the direct cause of death in these cases. The numbers and charts in this story have been updated to account for this error and are current as of July 30.
Texas ’southernmost county, Cameron, is home to just 1.5% of the state’s population, but it accounts for nearly 5% of its known COVID-19 fatalities.
Cameron County - where 89% of residents are Hispanic and nearly a third live below the poverty line - stands out as just one stark example of widespread disparities in COVID-19 outcomes. Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for communities of color and low-income communities.
These disparities, and a wealth of other demographic information, became more apparent this week when new tallying methods at the state health agency revealed a more complete picture of who has died in Texas and where. Trends showing that Black and Hispanic individuals had been disproportionately hit by the virus were clear nationally and apparent in local snapshots, but until earlier this week, the Texas Department of State Health Services ’limited demographic data had clouded the picture of those statewide disparities.
The Texas Tribune thanks its sponsors. Become one.
Hispanic Texans make up about 40% of the state’s population, but they account for 49% of its known COVID-19 fatalities. Black Texans also appear slightly overrepresented in the fatality toll, representing 14% of fatalities but just 12% of the state population. Texas reported a total of 6,274 fatalities Thursday evening.
By contrast, white and Asian Texans died at lower rates relative to their share of the state’s population.
Sometimes called the great equalizer, the novel coronavirus has been anything but - a deadly reality in a state like Texas, where the Hispanic population is expected to become the largest group in the state by mid-2021.
The disparities should not have been a surprise, said Jamboor Vishwanatha, director of the Texas Center for Health Disparities at the University of North Texas Health Science Center.
Need to keep tabs on the latest coronavirus news in Texas? Our evening roundup has .
The document discusses how increased border enforcement and immigration policies since the 1980s have disproportionately impacted women. Stricter border patrols have encouraged migrant workers to settle permanently in the US with their families instead of seasonal work. However, deportations have overwhelmingly targeted unauthorized immigrant men, leaving women as single parents struggling economically in a hostile environment without support. The document argues this is an overlooked feminist issue and that reform is needed to prevent further harm to immigrant families and women.
This document discusses several issues related to illegal immigration, including:
1) Illegal immigration poses challenges to a nation's legal policies, culture, and sovereignty. If left unchecked, it could destabilize a country and erase its history and traditions.
2) Illegal immigration is a global problem, as people move across borders in search of better opportunities. Several European and Western nations face large immigrant populations that are changing their demographics and cultures.
3) California has experienced a large increase in illegal immigration and its Hispanic population is growing rapidly, changing the state's demographics and culture. If trends continue, Hispanics will become the majority in California.
4) There are reasonable arguments on both sides of the
This document provides a summary of the historical context of migrant communities and education in the United States. It discusses programs that brought migrant workers to the US such as the Bracero Program from 1942-1964 which brought over 4.6 million Mexican workers. It also discusses challenges migrant students face such as academic and parental involvement challenges. The document concludes by discussing support programs for migrants including the High School Equivalency Program and College Assistance Migrant Program.
This document provides a summary of the challenges faced by migrant communities and students in the United States. It discusses the historical context of migrant worker programs such as the Bracero Program and current H-2A programs. It also examines challenges migrant students face such as academic and parental involvement barriers. The document concludes by outlining support programs that aim to help migrant students, including High School Equivalency Programs and the College Assistance Migrant Program.
This document discusses the history and foundations of the environmental justice movement. It defines environmental racism as the placement of low-income or minority communities near environmentally hazardous areas like toxic waste. The foundations of the US, including genocide, slavery, and white supremacy, institutionalized the domination of white people over other groups and the environment. Examples of environmental injustices include unequal treatment in regulations, siting pollution burdens in some communities while excluding them from benefits, and decisions reflecting broader racial biases. The movement advocates for fair treatment and meaningful participation of all people in environmental policy regardless of race or income. Indigenous groups have long been at the forefront of these issues.
CLINICAL SCHOLARSHIPTransnational Mothers Crossing the Bor.docxmonicafrancis71118
CLINICAL SCHOLARSHIP
Transnational Mothers Crossing the Border and Bringing
Their Health Care Needs
Rosa Maria Sternberg, PhD, RN1 & Charlotte Barry, PhD, RN2
1 Post Doctoral Fellow, Family Health Care Nursing, University of California, San Francisco, CA
2 Professor and Master Teacher, Florida Atlantic University, Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing, Boca Raton, FL
Key words
Transnational mothers, Latina immigrants,
women migrating, family separation
Correspondence
Dr. Rosa Maria Sternberg, University of
California—San Francisco, 181 Rudgear Dr.,
Walnut Creek, CA 94596. E-mail:
[email protected]
Accepted December 5, 2010
doi: 10.1111/j.1547-5069.2010.01383.x
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the experiences of transna-
tional Latina mothers who immigrated to the United States without legal doc-
umentation or their children.
Design: The study used a qualitative approach to collect data from eight
transnational Latina mothers from South Florida during the summer of 2009.
Methods: Data were collected using open-ended questions in one-on-one, in-
depth interviews that lasted 1 to 2 hr.
Findings: A hermeneutic phenomenological analysis of the data yielded seven
essential themes from the participants’ stories: living in extreme poverty,
having hope, choosing to walk away from poverty, suffering through the trip
to and across the border, mothering from afar, valuing family, and changing
personally.
Conclusions: The results indicate that transnational Latina mothers find
meaning in mothering from afar through embodied sacrifice, suffering, hop-
ing for a better life for their children, and family reunification. These results
have implications for healthcare providers, social workers, policy makers, and
educators whose professional responsibility is to advocate for, and to enhance
the health and social well-being of, transnational mothers.
Clinical Relevance: Although this study focused on transnational Latina
mothers in the United States, transnational motherhood is a worldwide phe-
nomenon. Healthcare professionals play an instrumental role in providing cul-
turally specific and evidence-based care to women who migrate without their
children.
Illegal immigration is a worldwide concern precipitated
by the changes that nations have made to control the
numbers and origin of the immigrants they admit. Al-
though global efforts to control residency have defined
world history for over a century, contemporary attempts
have proved largely ineffective. Illegal immigrants are liv-
ing and working the world over, despite new laws and
regulations (Dwyer, 2004).
In the United States, the passage of the U.S. Immigra-
tion and Nationality Act of 1965 eliminated national ori-
gin quotas and gave preference to close relatives of U.S.
citizens, refugees, and individuals with certain skills. This
law paved the way for a massive influx of immigrants
from Asia and Latin America, and by the year 2000, over
20 million new immigrants.
The document discusses how US Senators have begun asking ambassador nominees about their commitment to raising LGBT human rights issues with foreign governments. Some nominees, like the ambassadors to Honduras and Senegal, have pledged to meet with LGBT communities and officials to discuss human rights abuses and promote tolerance. The ambassador to Ghana also committed to meeting with LGBT leaders and officials to discuss protecting rights to life, liberty, and happiness. By encouraging ambassadors to prepare for questions about LGBT issues, progress is being made in raising awareness of such issues globally.
Immigrant Services Network of Austin Overview of Unaccompanied Alien Children...Angela-Jo Touza - Medina
This document summarizes a presentation on unaccompanied alien children (UACs) given to the Interfaith Shared Network of Austin (ISNA). It discusses the history of UAC treatment, current issues, and next steps. There has always been UAC migration but approaches have changed over time. Currently, more UACs are coming from Central America rather than Mexico. Legal representation, healthcare, education, and family reunification assistance are needed locally. Going forward, ISNA plans to coordinate agencies to address needs and pursue sustainable funding solutions.
The document discusses issues of racial inequality and opportunity in Detroit and beyond. It argues that while some see Obama's election as signifying a post-racial era, racial disparities persist and disadvantage marginalized groups. Specifically, foreclosures have disproportionately impacted black and Latino communities. The document calls for a focus on targeted universalism, coalition building, and empowering community organizations like MOSES to promote social justice and equal opportunity.
Similar to Preliminary Report on Migrant Deaths in South Texas (17)
U.S. Hispanic women, also known as Latinas, have recently and rapidly surfaced
as prominent contributors to the educational, economic, and cultural wellbeing of not only their own ethnicity, but of American society and the consumer marketplace. This rise of Latinas is driven both by strong demographics and a healthy inclination to embrace and retain their Hispanic culture even as they make significant strides toward success in mainstream America.
A first: Majority of U.S. adults now own a smartphoneSara Calderon
Majority of U.S. adults now own a smartphone according to a Pew Research Center study, marking the first time this has occurred. Smartphone ownership grew from 35% in 2011 to 56% in 2013. Samsung led all manufacturers in global smartphone shipments in 2012, capturing 25.2% of the market. While all demographic groups saw increases in smartphone ownership between 2012 and 2013, seniors over 65 had the lowest rates at 18% ownership.
Jan 2013 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals #sSara Calderon
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program data from August 2012 to January 2013. Over 400,000 requests were received, with over 150,000 approved and around 13,000 rejected. The top countries of origin were Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, and Peru. The top states of residence for applicants were California, Texas, New York, Illinois, and Florida.
The document announces advising days for a counseling program, providing times and dates when students can meet with advisors. It notes that students must sign up for 20-minute appointments in advance and should come prepared with questions. Advisors available for scheduled meetings include Drs. Trepal, Durodoye, Karcher, Haberstroh, Moyer, Henderson, Zambrano, and Ivers.
The document announces advising days for a counseling program, providing times and dates when students can meet with advisors. It notes that students must sign up for 20-minute appointments in advance and should come prepared with questions. Advisors available for scheduled meetings include Drs. Trepal, Durodoye, Karcher, Haberstroh, Moyer, Henderson, Zambrano, and Ivers.
The document provides submission guidelines for several counseling journals. It lists the journal name, website, and submission instructions for various counseling organizations and associations, including the Association for Creativity in Counseling, Association for Specialists in Group Work, American School Counselor Association, National Career Development Association, and American Mental Health Counselors Association among others. Submission instructions include submitting manuscripts online or via email in Microsoft Word format, including an abstract, cover letter, and following APA style guidelines.
The document is a student application for a practicum/internship in the Department of Counseling – Community Family Life Center at UTSA for Spring 2011. It requests student information, intended practicum site details, confirmation that prerequisites have been met, and the student's signature. If submitted by October 25, 2010, applicants will be notified via email of their application status and registration procedures.
This document provides instructions for students to apply for summer 2011 financial aid at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA). To be eligible, students must complete the 2010-2011 FAFSA, this UTSA Request form, and any required verification documents. They must also register for at least half-time coursework (6 hours for undergrads, 3 hours for grads). The priority deadline is January 14, 2011 for better access to limited grant funds. Loan amounts may increase if a student's grade level changes after spring 2011. By signing, students acknowledge requirements around enrollment status, withdrawal procedures, prorated grants, and annual loan limits. Processing times for requests are typically 5-7 business days during peak periods.
The documents summarize Texas state laws and regulations regarding Licensed Professional Counselors (LPCs). Key points:
- The Texas State Board of Examiners of Professional Counselors regulates LPCs and is overseen by the Department of State Health Services.
- An LPC must have a license to practice counseling for compensation or represent themselves as licensed.
- The practice of counseling involves assessing and treating mental health issues using techniques like counseling, assessment, consulting and referral.
- The laws define requirements for LPC board membership, qualifications for licensure, exemptions for other professionals, and powers/duties of the executive director who oversees LPC activities.
This clinical training manual provides comprehensive guidelines and procedures for the counseling department's clinical course sequence and information needed for a positive clinical training experience. It is divided into four sections covering the department, community family life center, policies and procedures, and licensure/credentialing. The department's mission is to prepare multiculturally competent counselors through practical experiences in its community family life center and affiliated sites, while emphasizing diversity. Students must meet fitness to practice standards to complete coursework and credentialing requirements.
This document is a program handbook for the Master of Arts in Counseling program at a university for the years 2009-2011. It provides information on the program's mission, goals, degree requirements, course registration, practicum and internship guidelines, ethical standards, licensing information, and lists of faculty and professional counseling organizations. The handbook serves as a reference for students in the counseling program.
The document outlines parking options for university departments holding events, including pay station pin codes for $6 flat rate parking, event parking cards for the South Parking Garage at $6 per day, and dashboard permits for $4-$6 daily parking. It also details additional parking services available like parking attendants, barricades, signage, shuttle buses, and more. Event organizers must submit parking requests a minimum of 2 weeks in advance and are responsible for any cancellation or change fees.
The UTSA Downtown Campus Map lists 6 locations: the Durango Building, Frio Street Building, Buena Vista Street Building, a parking garage requiring UTSA permits or visitor parking, the Monterey Building, and Bill Miller Plaza.
An astonishing, first-of-its-kind, report by the NYT assessing damage in Ukraine. Even if the war ends tomorrow, in many places there will be nothing to go back to.
Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
Essential Tools for Modern PR Business .pptxPragencyuk
Discover the essential tools and strategies for modern PR business success. Learn how to craft compelling news releases, leverage press release sites and news wires, stay updated with PR news, and integrate effective PR practices to enhance your brand's visibility and credibility. Elevate your PR efforts with our comprehensive guide.
Acolyte Episodes review (TV series) The Acolyte. Learn about the influence of the program on the Star Wars world, as well as new characters and story twists.
El Puerto de Algeciras continúa un año más como el más eficiente del continente europeo y vuelve a situarse en el “top ten” mundial, según el informe The Container Port Performance Index 2023 (CPPI), elaborado por el Banco Mundial y la consultora S&P Global.
El informe CPPI utiliza dos enfoques metodológicos diferentes para calcular la clasificación del índice: uno administrativo o técnico y otro estadístico, basado en análisis factorial (FA). Según los autores, esta dualidad pretende asegurar una clasificación que refleje con precisión el rendimiento real del puerto, a la vez que sea estadísticamente sólida. En esta edición del informe CPPI 2023, se han empleado los mismos enfoques metodológicos y se ha aplicado un método de agregación de clasificaciones para combinar los resultados de ambos enfoques y obtener una clasificación agregada.
Preliminary Report on Migrant Deaths in South Texas
1. SEARCHING FOR THE
LIVING, THE DEAD, AND
THE NEW DISAPPEARED ON
THE MIGRANT TRAIL IN
TEXAS
Preliminary Report on Migrant Deaths
in South Texas
2. Houston Unido May 1 Vigil for Worker and Immigrant Rights
Dedication
To all the families who, in the search for their
loved ones, raised the cry for justice and for the
many who are taking action and responding to
this grave injustice.
1
3. This report was written by Christine Kovic in collaboration with the Prevention of Migrant Deaths Working Group of
Houston United/Houston Unido. Revised July 15, 2013.
Christine Kovic
kovic@uhcl.edu
Associate Professor of Anthropology and Cross-Cultural Studies at the University of Houston-Clear Lake, has
conducted research in the field of human rights for the past 20 years. Her current research addresses the
intersection of human rights and immigration to the U.S., with emphasis on Central American migrants crossing
Mexico in the journey to the U.S. and on the human rights and organizing efforts of Latinos in the Houston region.
Houston United/Houston Unido
https://www.facebook.com/HoustonUnited
A coalition of community organizations, has been working to prevent border deaths, stop deportations and
detentions, and achieve an immigration reform that allows workers to migrate without being criminalized.
Special thanks to all those who made this report possible, including Maria Jimenez, Tom Power, Pat Hartwell, Gloria
Rubac, Stephanie Caballero, Alejandro Zuñiga, Mesias Pedroza.
Texas Civil Rights Project (TCRP)- Houston
www.texascivilrightsproject.org
TCRP’s mission “is to promote racial, social, and economic justice through litigation, education, and social services
for low/moderate-income persons least able to defend themselves. TCRP strives to foster equality, secure justice,
ensure diversity, and strengthen low/moderate-income communities in Texas.”
Eddie Canales
A native of South Texas, human rights advocate, organizer, and Board President of the National Network of
Immigrant and Refugee Rights. He has done amazing work in the Falfurrias region creating connections to advance
the project.
Rafael Hernández
angeles_del_desierto@yahoo.com
Founder and director of Los Ángeles del Desierto/Desert Angels, a humanitarian volunteer search and rescue
group. For years he has searched for migrants in mountains, waterways, deserts and brush land in the border
region, often at great personal risk.
Many thanks to Raquel Rubio-Goldsmith of the Binational Migration Institute of the University of Arizona for her
support and inspiration. Thanks to Francisco Arguelles for his assistance with the report, his generosity, and
patience. Hope Sanford, Susan Fitzpatrick Behrens, Kimberly Thurman, Liliana Noonan, among others, provided
information or comments. Bruce Palmer read and edited the report at a critical moment. Jeffrey Lash, Geography
Program of University of Houston-Clear Lake, created the map of Texas counties.
2
4. SEARCHING FOR THE LIVING, THE DEAD, AND THE NEW
DISAPPEARED ON THE MIGRANT TRAIL IN TEXAS
Contents
Executive Summary: Migrant Deaths in South Texas ...................................................................................4
Key Findings: .............................................................................................................................................4
Summary of Key Recommendations.........................................................................................................5
Introduction and Overview...........................................................................................................................6
Migrant Deaths in Texas ...............................................................................................................................8
Deaths in Brooks County and the Surrounding Region...............................................................................11
Unidentified Migrants in Brooks County and South Texas: “The Disappeared” ....................................12
Central American Migrants.....................................................................................................................18
Vehicle Accidents in South Texas............................................................................................................18
Immigration Policies and Border Deaths ....................................................................................................19
Deportations ...........................................................................................................................................19
Conclusion...................................................................................................................................................20
Recommendations......................................................................................................................................21
At the Local Level....................................................................................................................................21
At the State Level:...................................................................................................................................21
At the Federal Level:...............................................................................................................................22
At the International Level: ......................................................................................................................22
References ..................................................................................................................................................23
3
5. Executive Summary: Migrant Deaths in
South Texas
Thousands of men, women, and children have died in their attempts to cross the U.S.-Mexico border.
Official numbers from U.S. Department of Homeland Security place the total number of border deaths at
around 5,000 since 1998; other estimates place the number at 7,500 or higher. Death of border crossers
is a known outcome of migration enforcement and has a long history. Border deaths have increased
dramatically in the past fifteen years as enforcement policies have intentionally forced migrants to cross
in isolated and dangerous terrain, particularly the Arizona desert. Migrants are dying in large numbers in
South Texas as they attempt to cross the harsh desert brush.
Key Findings:
Recorded deaths of border crossers in Texas have reached an all-time high. Official statistics
from the U.S. Border Patrol, a partial accounting of border deaths, document a total 271 deaths
for the fiscal year of 2012, the first time that migrant deaths in Texas are higher than those of all
other border states combined.
The southern border is becoming more deadly. Deaths are increasing even as the number of
migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border is declining.
Migrant deaths in Texas are concentrated in Brooks County where 129 migrant bodies were
recovered last year. The U.S. Border Patrol Falfurrias checkpoint located in Brooks County is
some 60 miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border. Migrants are dying as they cross the harsh
desert terrain to avoid this checkpoint.
The deaths in South Texas result from a series of
policies that extend well beyond the region. These
policies include economic reforms that cause
emigration from Mexico and Central America, U.S.
border enforcement policies, deportation and the
criminalization of migrants in the U.S., and the
limited possibilities for large groups of migrants to enter the nation legally.
DNA testing, as required by Texas State Law for all unidentified remains, is not being carried
out in a standardized and coordinated manner to identify the dead. Family members who have
contacted Houston Unido have learned that officials have not taken DNA samples on
unidentified bodies that they suspected were their lost loved ones.
Migrant deaths and the lack of standardized DNA testing add to existing racial and ethnic
disparities. Those who die crossing the border are primarily from Mexico and Central America,
making evident the disproportionate impact of enforcement on Latino immigrants. Added to
this injustice, the failure to prioritize the identification of deceased border-crossers has resulted
in hundreds of unidentified remains of Latinos.
A lack of comprehensive criteria to count border deaths results in a dramatic undercount. The
partial count of deaths leads to a limited accounting for the human cost of enforcement policies.
“Death of border crossers is a known
outcome of migration enforcement
and has a long history.”
4
6. Summary of Key Recommendations
At the local level:
Establish protocols that comply with state law on DNA testing and on entering relevant data into
the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) database.
Ensure collection, transportation, and storage of DNA samples for all unidentified remains.
Promote humanitarian response to border deaths through seeking broad-based community
involvement in assistance to migrants and search and rescue efforts.
At the state level:
Ensure county compliance with Texas state law in carrying out DNA testing and entering
relevant information into missing persons database; establish a state fund to support such
compliance.
Support efforts by local authorities to prevent deaths and identify remains.
At the federal level:
Prioritize immigration reform that supports family reunification.
Enact moratorium on deportations and detentions of low priority cases
Prioritize respect for human rights of all border communities in border security policies.
Fund transportation and processing of unidentified remains.
Support installation of water drums and rescue beacons.
Establish a search and rescue group independent of U.S. Border Patrol and its enforcement
efforts.
Photo taken at demonstration in
Houston advocating for urgent
immigration reform, April 2013
5
7. Introduction and Overview
Thousands of men, women, and children have
died in their attempts to cross the U.S.-Mexico
border. Official numbers from U.S. Department
of Homeland Security place the total number of
border deaths at around 5,000 since 1998, and
other estimates place the number at 7,500 or
higher (Jimenez 2009).1
Death of border
crossers is a known outcome of migration
enforcement and has a long history (Nevins
2008).2
The causal link between the deaths of migrant
men, women, and children, and U.S. border
security policies is recognized and in large part,
intentional. The U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Services designed a strategy of
“Prevention-through-deterrence” that creates
obstacles and difficulties to discourage
undocumented immigration. The 1994 Border
Patrol Strategic Plan states, “The prediction is
that with traditional entry and smuggling routes
disrupted, illegal traffic will be deterred, or
forced over more hostile terrain, less suited for
crossing and more suited for enforcement.” In
the past two decades, border deaths have
increased dramatically as enforcement policies
have pushed migrants to cross in isolated and
dangerous terrain, particularly the Arizona
desert. Most recently, migrants are dying in
large numbers in South Texas as they attempt
to cross the harsh desert brush.
Recorded deaths of border crossers in Texas are
at an all-time high. Official statistics from the
U.S. Border Patrol, a partial accounting of
border deaths, document 271 deaths in Texas
for the fiscal year of 2012, higher than all other
states combined. That these deaths are taking
place as the number of migrants crossing the
U.S.-Mexico border declines means that the
southern border is becoming much more
deadly. At this time, migrant deaths in Texas are
concentrated in Brooks County, located 70-
miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border. Last
year, 129 migrant bodies were recovered in this
county, more than double the figure for the
previous year. The deaths in South Texas result
from a series of policies that extend well
beyond the region. These policies include
economic reforms that cause emigration from
Mexico and Central America, U.S. border
enforcement strategies, deportation and the
criminalization of migrants in the U.S., and the
limited possibilities for large groups of migrants
to enter the nation legally.
Data from U.S. Customs and Border Patrol
Border Deaths by State, 2012
Texas
Arizona
California
“Recorded deaths of border crossers in
Texas are at an all-time high.”
6
8. Adding to the complexity and tragedy of the
loss of life, local and state officials are not
carrying out DNA testing, as required by Texas
State Law for unidentified remains, in a
standardized and coordinated manner to
identify the dead. Family members who have
contacted Houston Unido have learned that
DNA samples had not been taken of
unidentified bodies that they suspected were
their lost loved ones. Without the collection of
DNA, concerned families will not be able to
locate the missing or even know if loved ones
have died. As such, migrants are “the new
disappeared” or “los nuevos desaparecidos,” to
use a term from the 1970s and 1980s to name
those who disappeared in the Civil Wars and
repressive military regimes in Central and South
America (Stephen 2008). U.S. immigration
policies as well as neoliberal economic policies
in Mexico which have displaced urban workers
have produced the current “disappeared” along
the U.S.-Mexico border. As was the case for the
disappeared of previous decades, families with
limited resources search persistently for news
of their loved ones, seeking closure and
knowledge of their whereabouts. This report is
motivated by the family members seeking
answers about the disappeared and those
facing the pain of loss.
The U.S. Congress is engaged in immigration
reform with continued emphasis on
enforcement and militarization of the U.S.-
Mexico border. This report details one of the
most tragic impacts of the criminalization and
deportation policies which follow this emphasis.
As legislators count votes to advance
immigration reform that intensifies
enforcement, in Texas we continue to count
bodies. Migrant deaths have become the
metrics of a failed border security policy. U.S.
society as whole has declined its moral
responsibility for this situation by failing to hold
immigration policy makers and enforcers
politically and legally accountable for the
outcomes of these policies, which are carried
out in the name of all Americans.
The Report
This preliminary report provides an initial
overview of the current crisis in South Texas. It
aims to call attention to this crisis and to call on
authorities at the local, state, and federal level
to take action to prevent these deaths. It points
to the lack of standardized criteria in both the
processing of human remains and procedures
to count migrants who die crossing the border –
counts that are essential for understanding the
outcomes of U.S. immigration policies. The
report presents a synopsis of trends in migrant
deaths in South Texas and some of the causes
for these deaths. At its close, it presents a series
of recommendations to address the current
humanitarian crisis. This report, one of the first
to focus on deaths in Texas, follows a series of
important studies that document and analyze
border deaths and their links to enforcement
policies (Cornelius 2001; Eschbach, Hagan,
Rodríguez 2003;
Jimenez 2009;
Rubio-
Goldsmith et al.
2006).3
“Migrant deaths have become
the metrics of a failed border
security policy.”
7
9. Migrant Deaths in
Texas
In 2012 Texas had the highest number of migrant
deaths ever recorded for the state. Border Patrol
recorded 271 deaths for Texas, a number that is
59% of the total number of border deaths, 463.
Deaths in Texas increased by 73% from 2011 to
2012, and deaths in the Rio Grande Valley Sector
(which includes Brooks County) more than
doubled. Deaths are concentrated in the Rio
Grande Valley sector (with 150), followed by the
Laredo sector (90), and the Del Rio Sector (29).
According to Border Patrol apprehension figures, the number of migrant deaths is increasing at a time
when fewer migrants are crossing the border. Although Border Patrol apprehensions are at best an
imperfect measure of
unauthorized border crossers,
they do reflect larger trends in
unauthorized migration and
changes in such trends
(Epenshade 1995; Rubio-
Goldsmith et al. 2006).
Mexican migration to the
United States has declined
significantly in recent years, in
large part due to the downturn
in the U.S. economy (Passel,
Cohn, Gonzalez-Barrera 2012).
Border Patrol apprehensions
for the years of 2011 and 2012
are the lowest in decades
going back to 1971.
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Rio Grande
Valley (150
deaths)
Laredo (90
deaths)
Del Rio (29
deaths)
Big Bend (1
death)
El Paso (1
death)
Texas Border Deaths by Sector 2012
Data: U. S. Customs and Border Patrol
Border Patrol Sectors, 2012 GAO Border Patrol Report
8
10. In sum, it is not the case that more migrants are dying because more are attempting to cross. To the
contrary, after more than fifteen years of militarization of the border, a higher proportion of border
crossers are perishing. The number of migrant deaths per 100,000 Border Patrol apprehensions provides
an approximate death rate (Rubio-Goldsmith et al. 2006). With a few fluctuations, the death rate in
Texas is rising, reaching a total of 152.25 for 2012, a 22% jump from 2011 alone. The rate is six times the
rate of 2002. The increase in enforcement along the border forces migrants to cross in more dangerous
areas, pushing up the death toll.
0
500000
1000000
1500000
2000000
2000 2001 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Southwest Border Apprehensions by U.S. Border Patrol
Texas Border Crosser Death Rate
Data from U.S. Customs and Border Patrol
9
11. The problem is much worse than it appears. The actual number of border deaths is much higher than
the number reported by Border Patrol for several reasons.
Geography of the region and conditions under which migrants die: The Texas border with
Mexico spans 1,255 miles. Fifteen Texan counties touch this international border and many
more are located within 100-miles of the border. Migrants travel in isolated areas to avoid
detection. Because of the low population density and thick desert foliage in Texas’s rural areas,
bodies many not be located for days, weeks, or even months. Bodies decompose rapidly in the
hot and humid climate, and desert predators, including wild hogs, may move or destroy human
remains, leaving only scattered bones. Unknown numbers of human remains are never
recovered.
Narrow criteria for classifying border deaths: These figures may not include cases in which local
authorities, border residents, migrants, or humanitarian organizations, among others, are the
first to come in contact with and deal with migrant remains. They may not include skeletal
remains or bodies beyond “target zones” (Jimenez 2009; Rubio-Goldsmith et al. 2006).
Exclusion of deaths in Mexico: Migrants whose bodies are recovered in Mexico, including the
dozens who drown every year in the Rio Grande, are not included in Border Patrol counts.4
To underscore the incomplete nature of current numbers Rubio-Goldsmith et al. (2006) use the term
Recovered Bodies of Undocumented Border Crossers instead of “migrant deaths.” The term “migrant
deaths” conveys the idea that the count is complete and “leads to semantic misrepresentations of what
is actually known about how many unauthorized migrants are dying in the U.S. (as well as in Mexico)”
(Rubio-Goldsmith et al. 2006: 19). An undercount of migrant deaths makes less visible this known
outcome of border enforcement. A lower count allows for a focus on increasing border “security” and
helps steer attention away from the security of migrants themselves or the deaths produced by security
policies.
The increasing number of migrant deaths demonstrates the significant limitations of current search and
rescue operations. The Border Patrol created a Search, Trauma, and Rescue Unit (BORSTAR) in 1998 in
response to criticism about border deaths. Composed of Border Patrol Agents that receive special
training, BORSTAR responds “to the growing number of migrant deaths occurring along our nation’s
border” and “provides assistance to those in distress” (U.S. Custom and Border Patrol Fact Sheet). A
number of studies point to the limits of BORSTAR, in particular the Government Accounting Office
challenged BORSTAR’s incomplete data on deaths and rescue in assessing its efficiency (GAO 2006).
BORSTAR places the Border Patrol in the role of both “persecutor and rescuer” with the goal of
implementing “the border enforcement policies that foster the conditions of suffering and death”
(Jimenez 2009: 36). The existence of a search and rescue unit that forms part of the Border Patrol, an
enforcement agency, has two central limitations. First, migrants, even those in acute distress or danger,
often hesitate to call for emergency assistance from those in law enforcement, knowing that their
rescue in the desert may lead to detention and deportation. Given that undocumented entry is classified
as a crime, and re-entry a felony, calling for emergency assistance may lead to detention. Second,
BORSTAR agents have two roles -- that of enforcement and that of saving lives. These roles can conflict
with one another, and enforcement actions pull resources and personnel away from saving lives.
10
12. Deaths in Brooks County and the
Surrounding Region
The deaths in the Border Patrol’s Rio Grande Valley Sector concentrate in Brooks County, with a
reported total of 129 deaths last year.5
Brooks County is the site of the U.S. Border Patrol Falfurrias
Checkpoint, an interior traffic checkpoint located some 60-miles north of the border. It is situated on the
corridor used by coyotes (smugglers) to transport migrants to Houston and other cities and stops every
northbound vehicle. According to U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, “The station’s primary responsibility
is to maintain traffic check operations to detect and apprehend terrorists and/or their weapons of mass
effect as well to prevent the passage of illegal aliens and/or contraband from the border area to major
cities in the interior of the United States via U.S. Highway 281.”6
The U.S. Border Patrol reports that this
checkpoint “is nationally known as a primary leader in seizures, both alien and narcotic apprehensions.”
It is surrounded by “rough” terrain and “crude vegetation.” At the checkpoint’s entrance is a sign giving
a count of “Year-to-date seizures” with a tally for drugs (in pounds) and for “undocumented aliens.” The
sign listed 12,367 as the total of “undocumented aliens” in August 2012. The Falfurrias Station also
includes a detention and processing station.
Indicator at Border Patrol Checkpoint in Falfurrias, TX, August 2012.
11
13. As migrants led by human smugglers attempt to avoid the checkpoint, they must cross harsh, dry, and
isolated terrain. The land surrounding the checkpoint is owned by private ranches, with the King Ranch
on the east side of the highway and other ranches on the west side. Migrants must walk for miles
around the checkpoint and wait for coyotes in the brush. Some are abandoned or injured in the journey,
others become too exhausted to continue, and some become disoriented or lost in the region. The flat
land provides few markers by which migrants can orient themselves. Stories from survivors of these
crossings, such as that narrated in the testimony of Marta Iraheta (included in this report), reveal that
coyotes leave behind those who are injured, ill, or too tired to continue the journey through the brush.
Unidentified Migrants in Brooks County and South Texas: “The Disappeared”
Members of Houston Unido became involved in this recent crisis of missing migrants in South Texas
when Rafael Hernandez of Los Ángeles del Desierto (Desert Angels) visited Houston on his way to Brooks
County in June 2012. Hernandez is a member of
the humanitarian organization Desert Angels,
which he founded in 1997 along with six
volunteers. He uses search and rescue skills
obtained through the Red Cross in Mexico City
to respond to calls from family members to
locate missing loved ones along the border.
Desert Angels primarily works to rescue lost
Selected Texas Border Counties
“Over the past year Hernandez received over 300
phone calls or email messages from family
members or others reporting missing loved ones in
the region.”
12
14. migrants but also attempts to recover bodies and remains (Jimenez 2009).
Last year, Hernandez began receiving phone calls from family members reporting lost loved ones in the
Falfurrias region. Many of these calls were from Central American families about people who had been
deported and went missing in attempts to return. Over the past year (May 2012 to May 2013),
Hernandez received over 300 phone calls or email messages from family members or others reporting
missing loved ones in the region. A selection of emails from October 2012 includes the following cases:
• A Salvadoran woman wrote of searching for her 24-year-old cousin, Krissia, who had last called
her two months earlier while crossing Falfurrias, Texas. The cousin spoke to a presumed coyote
who said that Krissia had been detained by the border patrol. When the cousin went to search
for Krissia in the region, she could not find any news of her. The cousin writes, “Her parents
currently live in El Salvador and are very humble people and like us they are desperate for news
of Krissia.”
• A man wrote of searching for his Guatemalan friend, Antulio, a young man, who was last seen
near the Falfurrias checkpoint.
• A woman wrote in search of her cousin, Brenda, a Honduran woman who is 31-years old. The
last news she received of her was that the guide she was traveling with abandoned her in
McAllen, Texas in October 2012.
When Hernandez traveled to Brooks County in an attempt to locate the missing migrants, he learned
that recovered migrant bodies were being sent to the Elizondo Mortuary and Cremation Services in
Mission, Texas. They were eventually buried in the Sacred Heart cemetery in Falfurrias, some without
the collection of any DNA samples. When Marta Iraheta went to Brooks County to try to find her
nephew and his friend in September 2012, she found out that a man believed to be her nephew had
been buried already and that it would cost thousands of
dollars to exhume the body and conduct DNA testing. In
another case, Leila de Jesús Torres, a resident of El Salvador,
was searching for her son Nestor Enrique Calderon Torres,
who had crossed the border near McAllen. His mother
believed that his remains were being kept at the Elizondo
funeral home, but could not visit to attempt identification.
The funeral home informed her that she would have to pay
for DNA testing. It was only through the intervention of
Rafael Hernandez, and later of Houston Unido, that the body was held for DNA testing.
The number of unidentified remains recovered in Brooks County has more than tripled in the past year,
rising from 5 in 2010, to 13 in 2011, and 47 in 2012.7
The 47 unidentified remains reported are out of a
total 129 recovered migrant remains, meaning that 36% are unidentified. Of the 82 classified as
identified, some were identified by driver licenses or other personal belongings, a method that may be
inaccurate due to the fact that these items commonly change hands during the migration process.
“The 47 unidentified remains reported
are out of a total 129 recovered
migrant remains, meaning that 36%
are unidentified.”
13
15. Marta Iraheta, Testimony from May 1, 2013, Houston, Texas
Good evening everyone and thank you for being here and supporting us in this cause because we all
have to pray and to ask God for our families that, one day, left our countries with the dream of reaching
this country in search of work to support themselves. They paid a very high price and never arrived.
My nephew, along with his friend, left El Salvador in June last year [2012] and on June 29 arrived in
Reynosa, and on July 1st
they began the walk in the desert. But my nephew’s friend was already
dehydrated and found some water to drink where cows drink. And I think that he was so nervous that
he drank too much water. Suddenly, according to what one of the people with them told me, he simply
collapsed and fell down, and the coyote that was bringing them didn’t do anything for him, nothing
more than looking back to make sure that he was dead. We think that they took his identification
because he brought his identification and we haven’t heard anything about him since. This was in July of
last year.
My nephew continued walking…. On July 5 last year he injured his leg falling in a hole there in the desert
and he couldn’t walk anymore. He was so dehydrated that he couldn’t walk anymore and there they left
him, just five minutes away from [the highway] ... But he couldn’t go any further, my nephew couldn’t
walk anymore, and there he stayed, there he stayed.
I felt like I was in hell, I felt like I was in hell. My sister called me. She was in El Salvador and called me
and asked me to do something. They don’t know where South Texas is. They only know that I live in
Houston and they believe, lots of people believe, that living in Houston is right there [in South Texas].
And from there to Houston there are hours of difference. But with the help of the Ángeles del Desierto
[Desert Angels], I went to walk in search of him. But I didn’t find anything. I didn’t find anything. We
never knew anything about him. We never knew anything about him.
One month later they found a cadaver that was already only bones and we recognized that it was him
because I went to Mission, Texas to see the evidence. . . He had two photos in the same pants pocket.
But we don’t know with certainty that it was him. We need DNA to know if in reality it is him. There is no
DNA here in Texas. We need the government to help us with a DNA database so that we can take DNA
samples from our families and be able to match them. Without that, we cannot do anything… and there
are many families there that say, “My son, my father, or my mother was lost there. Help us, they were
lost and no one knows anything about them.”
It is sad to say that he was lost and … it is very hard, very hard. I ask you, please, I ask that we pray for
him, for his family, and for those that remain in the desert that came in search of the American Dream,
the American Dream that we so desire and that sometimes we pay such a high price for and we never
reach it…
As I said, there [in south Texas] they have a cemetery where they bury those that supposedly do not
have anyone to reclaim them. But it is not that the families don’t reclaim them because they don’t love
14
16. them, it is that they don’t even know that they are there. And sometimes they just put a little aluminum
plaque where they fall down. And they say that when they cut the grass, they throw the plaques away.
That means they do not know where they are [buried]. I repeat, I hope that the government does
something and creates a DNA database so we can find our family members. Thank you.
On February 20, 2013, a letter signed by more than thirty organizations including the Texas Civil Rights
Project (TCRP) and Houston Unido was delivered to Brooks County urging that DNA samples be taken
from all unidentified remains in compliance with state law. According to Texas State Law, DNA samples
must be collected from unidentified remains to be submitted to the University of North Texas Health
Science Center for inclusion in the database.8
At the writing of this report, no conclusive information has
been obtained regarding DNA testing of unidentified remains. Although a protocol signed by the four
Justices of the Peace dated April 30, 2013 states that DNA testing will be ordered on all unidentified and
partial skeletal remains, there is no mention of how these tests will be taken and if and how they will be
included in a national database. In recent conversations with the TCRP, Brooks County officials have
reported that they are in the initial stages of DNA testing with the assistance of Baylor University.
On May 19, 2013, forensic anthropologist Lori Baker of Baylor University with a team of students began
exhumations and analysis of bodies that had been previously buried in dozens of pauper graves in the
Sacred Heart Cemetery of Falfurrias. As of June 21, 2013, Baylor University had exhumed 65 bodies for
Elmer Esau Barahona is the nephew of Marta Iraheta
15
17. later identification. Remains were sent to Baylor and Texas State
University to take DNA samples in hopes they can be identified.
The current crisis in Brooks County is one created by state and
federal policy. Texas lacks standardized criteria for categorizing a
death (identified or unidentified) as that of a border crosser and
no readily accessible public information site exists. In January of
2013, the TCRP began requesting public information on the
number of unidentified human remains as well as the policies on
processing such remains for sixteen South Texan counties. Many
counties have yet to respond to the TCRP request. The lack of a
state-level policy regarding the recording and reporting on
migrant remains results in a variety of policies that are not
standardized or coordinated. A lack of standardization has left all
of the counties on their own to deal with this growing crisis with
no federal or state support. In their conversations with county
officials, TCRP found that when asked about the processing,
identification, and burial of unidentified human remains, the
majority of officials were unable to provide clear answers.
Texas counties are not required by law to have a medical
examiner and lack local funding for the processing and
identification of human remains. Many counties do not have a
written protocol regarding who is responsible for taking DNA
samples, though state law indicates that a justice of the peace is
responsible for conducting an inquest (Texas Code of Criminal
Procedures, art. 49.04(a)). There is no medical examiner in
Falfurrias (Brooks County). Larger cities such as Corpus Christi
(Nueces County), some 70-miles from Falfurrias, and Laredo
(Webb County), 90-miles away, can afford medical examiners
because of significantly higher budgets. Hidalgo County (in
Edinberg) has a pathologist to perform autopsies. This is of
particular concern since the information for the National Missing
and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) database of the
National Institute of Justice must be entered by a medical
examiner or coroner, according to its webpage. NamUs is a public
database with detailed information on unidentified persons. It is
available on-line in English and Spanish and can be searched by
those seeking lost loved ones, facilitating a match.
Several counties near Brooks County also report significant numbers of unidentified remains, most likely
those of unauthorized border crossers. Of note, Kenedy County, bordering Brooks County on the east,
reported recovering ten unidentified human remains for the year 2012. These remains are sent for DNA
Unidentified
Persons in
South Texas
Counties,
2012
County Unidentified
Jim Hogg 2
Cameron 2
Kenedy 10
Brooks 47
Hidalgo 5
Jim
Wells
0
Willacy 0
Starr 7
Webb 9
Zapata 2
16
18. testing and autopsies. Kenedy County’s population is just over 400 and it is the site of the King Ranch.
Reports for Brooks County plus eleven surrounding counties indicate a total of 86 unidentified remains
for the year 2012.9
The number of unidentified remains is not the same as the number of border crosser
deaths because many border crosser remains are identified.
Most South Texas counties have limited funding for forensic analysis. Brooks County, with an annual
budget of $5 million, requires additional funding to comply with state law in the collection,
transportation, and storage of DNA samples (Bustillo 2013). It receives no federal assistance for this
task.
The unidentified remains in these South Texas counties are some of the hundreds, if not thousands, of
unidentified remains of border crossers, leaving many family members not knowing what has happened
to their loved ones. Even when DNA samples are collected from remains, family members must enter
their DNA in a database in order to make a match to identify the dead. Not only are many family
members (residing in the U.S., Mexico, or Central America) hesitant to submit samples, most law
enforcement agencies in the U.S. will not enter samples from foreign nationals due to funding
restrictions (Reineke 2013). This means that many of the dead remain unidentified. The lack of
identification of Latino immigrant border crossers is but one way in which DNA databases reflect racial
disparities. Ironically, forensic DNA databases contain large and growing numbers of Latinos and African
Americans, groups that are overrepresented in prisons because of racial disparities in the criminal justice
system (Chow-White, Duster 2011). Yet there is scant investment in identifying the remains of dead
Latino border crossers through taking DNA samples and matching them to family members.
17
19. Central American Migrants
Increasing numbers of non-Mexican migrants, primarily Central Americans from Guatemala, Honduras,
and El Salvador, are being apprehended at the southern border. While non-Mexican apprehensions
represented just over 11% of the total for the Southwest Border for the Fiscal Year of 2010, they
reached 14% in 2011 and 26% in 2012. For the first time, the recorded number of non-Mexicans made
up the majority (51%) of the
migrants entering the Rio
Grande Valley Sector in
2012. They also made up a
significant and growing
number of those entering
the Del Rio Sector, 43%, and
29% in the Laredo Sector.10
It
is likely that one reason
Central Americans are
crossing South Texas is
because it is the shortest
distance from their home
countries. These migrants
have already suffered a long,
exhausting, and dangerous
journey across Mexico, over
what has become a vertical
border of more than 1,000
miles before they reach the
U.S. border (Kovic 2010).11
Vehicle Accidents in South Texas
A significant number of migrants die in motor vehicle collisions, often as they are fleeing Border Patrol
agents or police. Labeled “accidents,” these collisions often take place in structured ways. As coyotes
are traveling late at night, or at high speeds in overloaded vehicles, collisions occur. In just four
accidents from April of 2012 to April of 2013 in South Texas , 24 migrants were killed, and dozens more
were injured. In the most widely-publicized of these cases, fifteen people died when a pick-up truck
carrying 23 migrants from Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras crashed on July 22, 2012 in Goliad County
off Highway 59. Law enforcement officers report that overloaded vehicles traveling at high speeds are
common as coyotes work to transport migrants from the border to Houston (Schiller and Pinkerton
2012). Following the crash, Adrian Fulton of the Victoria Mortuary Services received hundreds of phone
calls from people searching for missing loved ones. “Yesterday, we probably fielded 1,000 calls. I am
trying to find my brother; I am trying to find my sister; I am trying to find my husband,” he reported
(Schiller and Pinkerton 2012). The high number of calls is further evidence of the many family members
searching for lost loved ones.12
Central American women in Chiapas searching for loved
ones disappeared during migration through Mexico.
18
20. Immigration Policies and Border Deaths
Migrant deaths are not a new occurrence but a known outcome of border enforcement. A series of
reports have documented these deaths and their rise in the 1990s following the intensification of border
enforcement (American Public Health Association 2009; Eschbach, Hagan, Rodríguez 2003; Jimenez
2009; Rubio-Goldsmith 2006). The Border Patrol established a “prevention-through-deterrence”
approach that increased Border Patrol agents,
barriers, and new technologies at common
crossing points, notably urban areas. It was first
issued in its 1994 Strategic Plan, not coincidentally
the year the North American Free Trade
Agreement was enacted, causing an increase in
migration out of rural Mexico toward the United
States. Policies such as Operation Gatekeeper,
which was established in the San Diego, California region and concentrated border enforcement in
populated areas, pushed people to cross in more isolated and dangerous regions. The Binational
Migration Institute at the University of Arizona shows a “funnel effect” in which migrants were pushed
away from busy crossing points into Arizona’s desert, while the number of deaths increased 20-fold
from 1990 to 2005 (Rubio-Goldsmith et al. 2006). As the number of deaths soars, the policies continue.
As enforcement has intensified in Arizona -- with more border patrol agents, a fence, and new
technologies including Black Hawk Helicopters, drones, and ground sensors -- migrants cross on more
dangerous routes in both Arizona and Texas, with higher rates of death. Doris Meissner (2009) who was
INS Commissioner when the prevention-through-deterrence program began in 1994, later observed that
these deaths are “a tragic byproduct of border enforcement.”
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, which is charged with enforcing the policies that are a major cause of
migrant deaths, is part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Unlike local and state
jurisdictions, which lack funding for processing the dead, Customs and Border Patrol has a current
budget of over $3.5 billion. The 2012 budget was more than double the budget ten years earlier (2002),
and ten times that of 1992 (without any adjustment for inflation).13
As Congress considers increasing
spending for border militarization even further, private defense contractors stand to benefit. Major
military contractors are competing for large contracts to deploy surveillance equipment along the
border, especially as the U.S. withdraws from wars overseas (Lipton 2013).
Deportations
The rise in the number of border deaths must be placed in the broader context of the increasing
criminalization of immigrants in the U.S. Deportations reached an all-time high in the 2012 fiscal year,
with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) reporting over 400,000 deportations. ICE emphasized
that 55% of those deported were convicted criminals, but this is a very misleading figure, since
unauthorized re-entry after deportation is now a felony.
“Not only are returning migrants at risk of
detention, they also risk death in the process of
return as they must cross the southern border in
dangerous conditions to reach their families.”
19
21. Deportation is linked to unauthorized reentry and migrant deaths. As a direct result of deportations,
thousands of parents have been separated from their citizen children. In a two year period from 2010 to
2012, over 200,000 deportations involved parents with children who were U.S.-citizens (Wessler 2012;
see also Applied Research Center 2011). A University of Arizona study of recent deportees found that
one in four had children under 18 who were U. S. citizens. Not surprisingly, many deportees hope to
return to their families, homes, and jobs in the U.S. (Slack et al. 2013). Not only are returning migrants at
risk of detention, they also risk death in the process of return as they must cross the southern border in
dangerous conditions to reach their families (Meng 2013).
Conclusion
The number of migrant deaths in South
Texas is at a record high and current trends
project that this rate may be even higher for
the year 2013. From October 1, 2012 to May
17, 2013, unofficial Border Patrol statistics
report 78 deaths for the Rio Grande
Valley Sector, 30 for the Laredo Sector, and
9 for the Del Rio Sector. The summer
months are especially dangerous for
unauthorized border crossers who suffer
heat stroke and dehydration in the Texas
brush.
As Congress is currently engaged in another
attempt to reform immigration policy to “fix
a broken system,” it is essential to integrate
the impact of enforcement and border
control policies in the discussion. Demands
for more militarization and border
enforcement must account for and measure
the impact these policies will have in terms
of the loss of human life. While local
authorities did not create the conditions
under which migrants are now crossing border
counties, officials are left with the
responsibility of developing clear policies to
protect human life and to locate and identify human remains of deceased border crossers. To do so,
local authorities require support from the federal government.
Gravesite at Brooks County’s Sacred Heart Cemetery, where
many unidentified remains have been buried
20
22. Amnesty International labels border deaths a “heinous abnegation” of the state responsibility to respect
human rights. Amnesty’s 2013 annual report notes that these deaths occur as “a direct result of
measures taken by the U.S. government to make safer passages impassable for migrants” (Amnesty
International 2013:7). These deaths are also a result of increased deportations and the very limited
possibilities for large groups of migrants to gain legal entry into the United States or to legalize their
status after living in the U.S. for years or even decades.
Family members, activists, and humanitarian groups are demanding not only that the dead be identified,
but more importantly, that migrants no longer die as they attempt to cross borders. The United States
must be capable of creating immigration policies that are not centered on militarization, enforcement,
separation of families, and the criminalization of human mobility of low wage workers. In a globalizing
world where the U.S has played a central role in promoting free trade agreements and liberalization of
economies, immigration policies centered on respect for human rights of all people will support
interconnected human security, including that of all communities in the border region.
Recommendations
Border enforcement strategies have led to the deaths of thousands of migrants. The following
recommendations at the local, state, national, and international levels focus on actions to prevent
border deaths and to promote the human rights of communities and migrants on both sides of the U.S.-
Mexico border.
At the Local Level
Establish county protocols that comply with state law on DNA testing and on entering relevant
data into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) database.
Ensure collection, transportation, and storage of DNA samples for all unidentified remains.
Ensure proper handling and storage of human remains and recovered personal effects.
Promote humanitarian response to border deaths through seeking broad-based community
involvement in direct assistance to migrants and search and rescue efforts to prevent border
deaths.
At the State Level:
Ensure county compliance with Texas state law in carrying out DNA testing on all unidentified
remains; establish a state fund to support such compliance.
• Ensure that relevant information from unidentified human remains is entered into the National
Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) database.
21
23. At the State Level (continued):
• Create transparent and standardized public reporting of the number of migrant deaths for the
state.
Coordinate training of local officials in DNA sample collection for unidentified remains.
At the Federal Level:
Commit to an immigration reform that supports family reunification and moves away from
criminalizing an economic and social result of the current globalized economy.
Enact an immediate moratorium on deportations and detentions of low priority cases, including
decriminalization of entry, re-entry, and other practices related to undocumented status.
Reimburse U.S. counties within 200 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border for costs associated with
the transportation and processing of unidentified remains, funded through Department of
Homeland Security.
Install and expand rescue beacons and water drums in areas with migrant deaths. Monitor
number and placement of water drums and rescue beacons.
Encourage all genetic laboratories receiving federal funding to process DNA from unidentified
remains within 200 miles of the U.S.- Mexico border and compare the resulting genetic profiles
against samples from the relatives of any missing individual.
Provide documentation and reporting from Customs and Border Protection to relevant
committees at the end of each fiscal year on the trends in migrant deaths and the actions taken
to prevent deaths, including the installation and expansion of rescue beacons and water drums.
Appropriate funds necessary for each fiscal year to carry out these recommendations.
Form a DHS Border Oversight Task Force, with participation of members of border communities,
to ensure accountability of field enforcement practices on the border, including review of high
speed chases.
Establish a search and rescue group independent of the U.S. Border Patrol and independent of
enforcement activities.
Provide funding for community training at the local level for humanitarian response and search
and rescue for prevention of border deaths.
At the International Level:
Request an investigation on border deaths from the special rapporteur on migrants from
United Nations and/or Inter-American Commission of Human Rights.
22
24. References
American Public Health Association. 2009. “Border Crossing Deaths: A Public Health Crisis along the U.S.-
Mexico Border.” http://www.apha.org/advocacy/policy/policysearch/default.htm?id=1385
Amnesty International. 2013. “Annual Report: The State of the World’s Human Rights.” London:
Amnesty International.
Applied Research Center. 2011. “Shattered Families: The Perilous Intersection of Enforcement and the
Child Welfare System.” http://arc.org/shatteredfamilies
Bustillo, Miguel. 2013. “Near the U.S.-Mexico Border, a Grim New Reality.” Wall Street Journal, April 13.
Chow-White, PA and T. Duster. 2011. “Do Health and Forensic DNA Databases Increase Racial
Disparities?” PLOS Medicine. 8:10.
Cornelius, Wayne. 2001. “Death at the Border: The Efficacy and Unintended Consequences of U.S.
Immigration Control Policy, 1993-2000.” Working Paper 27, Center for Comparative Immigration
Studies, University of California San Diego.
Epenshade, T. J. 1995. “Using INS border apprehension data to measure the flow of undocumented
migrants crossing the U.S. frontier.” International Migration Review 29(2).
Eschbach, Jacqueline Hagan and Nestor Rodríguez, “Causes and Trends in Migrant Deaths along the U.S.-
Mexico Border, 1985-1998.” University of Houston: Center for Immigration Research.
Eschbach, Karl, Jacqueline Hagan and Nestor Rodríguez. 2003. “Deaths During Undocumented
Migration: Trends and Policy Implications in the New Era of Homeland Security.” In Defense of the Alien
26: 37-52.
Isacson, Adam and Meyer, Maureen. 2013. “The Alarming Rise of Migrant Deaths on U.S. Soil – And
What to Do About It.” Washington, DC: Washington Office on Latin American Affairs.
Jimenez, Maria. 2009. “Humanitarian Crisis: Migrant Deaths on the U.S.-Mexican Border.” San Diego and
Mexico City: American Civil Liberties Union of San Diego and Mexico’s National Commission on Human
Rights.
Jimenez, Maria. 2013. Proposal on Special Emergency Fund to Assist Brooks County in Complying with
State Mandate.
Kovic, Christine. 2010. “The Violence of Security: Central American Migrants Crossing Mexico’s Southern
Border.” Anthropology Now. 2(1).
Lipton, Eric. 2013. “As Wars End, a Rush to Grab Dollars Spent on the Border.” New York Times June 6.
23
25. MacCormack, Zeke. 2013. “3 immigrants dead after fleeing SUV plunges into stock pond.” Houston
Chronicle February 7.
Meissner, Doris and Donald Kerwin. 2009. “DHS and Immigration: Taking Stock and Correcting Course.”
Washington, DC: Migration Policy Institute.
Meissner, Doris, Donald M. Kerwin, Muzaffar Chishti, and Claire Bergeron. 2012. “Immigration
Enforcement in the United States: The Rise of a Formidable Machinery.” Washington, DC: Migration
Policy Institute.
Meng, Grace. 2013. “Turning Migrants into Criminals: The Harmful Impact of U.S. Border
Prosecutions.” New York: Human Rights Watch.
Mexico’s National Commission of Human Rights, 2007. “Todos Saben, Nadie Sabe: Trece Años de
Muerte de Migrantes, Reporte sobre impunidad y muerte en la frontera sur de Estados Unidos.” Mexico
City: Mexico’s National Commission of Human Rights.
Nevins, Joseph, 2008. Dying to Live: A Story of U.S. Immigration in an Age of Global Apartheid. San
Francisco, CA: City Lights Books.
Passel, Jeffrey, D’Vera Cohn and Ana Gonzalez-Barrera. 2012. “Net Migration from Mexico Falls to Zero –
and Perhaps Less.” Washington D.C.: Pew Research Hispanic Center.
Reineke, Robin. 2013. “Lost in the System: Unidentified Bodies on the Border.” NACLA Report on the
Americas 46(2): 50-53.
Rubio-Goldsmith, Raquel, M. Melissa McCormick, Daniel Martinez, and Inez Magdalena Duarte. 2006.
“The ‘Funnel Effect’ and Recovered Bodies of Unauthorized Migrants Processed by the Pima County
Office of the Medical Examiner, 2990-2005, Report Submitted to the Pima County Board of Supervisors,
Tucson, AZ: Binational Migration Institute.
Schiller, Dane and James Pinkerton. 2012. “Illegal immigrants in fatal truck crash were headed to
Houston,” Houston Chronicle, July 25.
Slack, Jeremy, Daniel E. Martinez, Scott Whiteford, Emily Peiffer. 2013. “In the Shadow of the Wall:
Family Separation, Immigration Enforcement and Security.” Tucson: Center for Latin American Studies,
University of Arizona.
http://las.arizona.edu/sites/las.arizona.edu/files/UA_Immigration_Report2013web.pdf
Stephen, Lynn. 2008. “Los Nuevos Desaparecidos y Muertos: Immigration, Militarization, Death and
Disappearance on Mexico’s Borders.” Security Disarmed: Critical Perspectives on Gender, Race, and
Militarization, edited by Barbara Sutton, Sandra Morgan and Julie Novkov. Rutgers University Press.
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol. 2013. Border Deaths by Fiscal Year.
http://www.cbp.gov/linkhandler/cgov/border_security/border_patrol/usbp_statistics/usbp_fy12_stats/
border_patrol_fy.ctt/border_patrol_fy.pdf
24
26. United States Government Accountability Office. 2006. “Illegal Immigration: Border-Crossing Deaths
Have Doubled Since 1995; Border Patrol’s Efforts to Prevent Deaths Have Not Been Fully Evaluated.”
GAO-06-770. Washington, D.C.
Wessler, Seth Freed. 2012. “Nearly 205K Deportations of Parents of U.S. Citizens in Just Over Two
Years.” Colorlines, December 17.
1
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security Border Safety Initiative and Customs and Border Patrol record
migrant deaths along the southwest border. Maria Jimenez estimated 5,607 deaths from 1994 to 2009 using the
DHS numbers plus the numbers from Mexico’s Secretariat of Foreign Relations. These numbers were updated with
DHS data from 2010 (365), 2011 (375), and 2012 (468) and SRE estimates for 2010 (334) and 2011 (325).
2
Geographer Joseph Nevins makes the important point that migrant death due to border enforcement has a long
history. In one of many examples, during the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, unauthorized Chinese migrants died in
the desert in attempts to enter the U.S.
3
While the number of migrant deaths is increasing in Texas, the state of Arizona continues to report a high toll.
The Binational Migration Institute of the University of Arizona titled “A Continued Humanitarian Crisis at the
Border: Undocumented Border Crosser Deaths Recorded by the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner,
1990-2012” released June 5, 2013 documents these deaths.
4
In one example of this undercount Miguel Angel Isidro, Mexico’s Consul in Laredo, Texas reported 26 migrant
deaths in the region from January to September 2012 from drowning in Mexico in the Rio Grande (Diario de
Yucatán, “Suman 60 migrantes muertos al tartar de ingresar a EE.UU. por Nuevo Laredo,” September 10, 2012).
These 26 deaths are in addition to the 34 migrants who had perished on the U.S.-side due to dehydration. To give
another example, the powerful, short film by David Riker “The River” narrates the story of a Mexican fireman
Armando who has pulled 600 bodies of migrants out of the Rio Grande near Nuevo Laredo in a ten year period
from 1995-2005, Riker, David. 2013, Milestone for “The Girl.” http://davidrikersthegirl.com/videos/milestones/
5
The Rio Grande Sector, a region of 17,000 square miles, includes 18 counties: Cameron, Willacy, Hidalgo, Starr,
Brooks, Kenedy, Kleberg, Nueces, San Patricio, Jim Wells, Bee, Refugio, Calhoun, Goliad, Victoria, Dewitt, Jackson,
and Lavaca.
6
Falfurrias Station, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol.
http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/border_security/border_patrol/border_patrol_sectors/rio_grande_valley_sector/mc
allen_stations/falfurrias.xml
7
Data from Deputy Clerk.
8
The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure article 49.04(a) reads: “A justice of the peace shall conduct an inquest into
the death of a person who dies in the county served by the justice if: . . . (3) the body or a body part of a person is
found, the cause or circumstances of death are unknown, and: . . . (B) the person is unidentified.” Article 63.056 of
the same code reads: “A physician acting on the request of a justice of the peace under Subchapter A, Chapter 49,
a county coroner, a county medical examiner, or other law enforcement entity, as appropriate, shall collect
samples from unidentified human remains. The justice of the peace, coroner, medical examiner, or other law
enforcement entity shall submit those samples to the center for forensic DNA analysis and inclusion of the results
in the DNA database.” Legal Memorandum from Vinson & Elkins prepared for TCRP, November 26, 2012.
9
The source for Cameron, Webb, Zapata, Dimmit, and La Salle counties is the NamUs database. The source for
Brooks County comes from the County Clerk. Sources for Jim Hogg, Willacy, Kenedy, and Starr are the Sheriff’s
Offices. For Hidalgo County data comes from morgue receipts.
10
All data from United States Border Patrol,
http://www.cbp.gov/linkhandler/cgov/border_security/border_patrol/usbp_statistics/usbp_fy12_stats/nationwid
e_appr_2000_2012.ctt/nationwide_appr_2000_2012.pdf
25
27. 11
The U.S.-government has pressured Mexico’s government to increase enforcement to limit the transit of Central
American migrants traveling toward the United States. The Mérida Initiative in which the United States has
appropriated close to $2 billion to Mexico over a period of five years to fight drug trafficking, terrorism, and to
support border control is the most recent example of security collaboration.
12
On February 6, 2013, three immigrants died in Wilson County (southeast of San Antonio) after an SUV with
thirteen migrants crashed into a pond during a police chase (MacCormack 2013). On April 12, 2012, nine
passengers died and seven were injured when a minivan fleeing Border Patrol agents in Hidalgo County crashed.
On March 21, 2013, seven people died and eight were injured when a truck crashed into the National Air Station in
Kingsville, Texas. The truck was fleeing police after a traffic stop. Those who died were believed to be from
Honduras and Guatemala (Fox News Latino. 2013. “Car Accident Leaves 6 Undocumented Immigrants Dead Near
Texas Border.” March 21. Associate Press, “Seventh immigrant dies following Kingsville car crash,” March 22.)
13
The United States Border Patrol reports an enacted budget of 1.4 billion for FY 2002, and of 3.5 billion for fiscal
year 2012. The 1992 budget was $3.2 million. See
http://www.cbp.gov/linkhandler/cgov/border_security/border_patrol/usbp_statistics/usbp_fy12_stats/program_
budget.ctt/program_budget.pdf
Crosses representing fallen migrants in South Texas, Houston, May 1, 2013.
26