
What to Expect from Trump 2.0: U.S. Policies Toward Latin America
In her contribution to the Newsletter of the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung‘s Latin American Network for Inclusive Security, WOLA’s Vice President…
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In her contribution to the Newsletter of the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung‘s Latin American Network for Inclusive Security, WOLA’s Vice President…
The incoming Biden administration offers a chance for a massive reset of the Trump administration’s illegal and unprecedentedly cruel and…
The murder of environmental activist Adán Vez Lira in Veracruz state on April 8—the same day that the slain body…
Strengthening Military’s Role in Fighting Crime Puts Human Rights at Risk In a troubling development for Mexico, the country’s new…
With Congress debating a Department of Homeland Security funding bill, the issue of border security is in the spotlight. But while some in Washington quarrel over a nebulous “crisis” at the border, a lesser-known—but in many ways more grim—situation is playing out in Texas’s Rio Grande Valley region.
In February 2014, WOLA investigators paid a 12-day visit to several points along Mexico’s southern border with Guatemala. Their new report examines border security conditions, migration trends, and the push factors that force Central American migrants to abandon their countries of origin.
While much has been done to reform Mexico’s police, establishing strong internal and external controls has not been a priority for the Mexican government.
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