MCCMCC NACLA Report on the Americas Essay
Description
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April 15: Mexico, Border issues and immigration, United States foreign policy, and Latinx communities
Please use both a title page and a works cited page (neither of these pages count toward your 3-4 pages of text). These 3 reports will count as a combined 30% toward your final grade. In your works cited page, compose your article entry in a format like this:
Emilio Godoy, “Mexico Bans Glysophate But Tolerates Other Agrochemicals,” NACLA Report on the Americas website (January 28, 2021).In terms of the content of each report, I am looking for two main points of discussion. First, you should devote the first half of the report to a summary of the main points in the article that you selected. To help you to address this issue, consider some of these questions: What is the main issue being discussed? (i.e. immigration, elections, education, environment, women’s issues, crime, etc.) Who are the main personalities mentioned in the article? (i.e. Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, President Biden, Vice-President Harris, Former President Trump, etc.) How does the issue affect the people of the country mentioned in the article? Does the issue have any connection with United States interests? What do you think could be the best solution to resolve this problem?
And for the second point of discussion, please analyze the article that you selected and present your point of view on the story. For example, how do you feel about the story? How did this article contribute to your understanding about modern Latin America? And what do you think about the author’s perspective on the article? How does this topic relate to contemporary political, economic or cultural themes in the United States today?
Here is a list of articles from the NACLA website pertaining to regions for your first due date. The dates listed in parenthesis correspond to the publication date of the article. Everybody, just pick any one article from this list for your April 15 review. You will repeat the same process for your reviews on Central America/the Caribbean, and a South American nation. These articles range in date from February 2019 to April 2022.
Mexico, US Foreign Policy, Border Issues and Latinx Communities
Border Issues, Latinx Communities and US Foreign Policy:
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A Love Letter to Indigenous Blackness (Sept. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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A New Temporary Protected Status For Central America (Nov. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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New Life in Laredo As the Border Reopens (Dec. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Abolish ICE! Fighting for Humanity over Profit in Immigration Policy (June 2019)
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An Immigration Courts Backlog Keeps Central American Youth in Legal Limbo (June 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Biden’s New Immigration System Overlooks Mexican Refugees (June 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Border Land, Border Water (Book Review) (July 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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Border Shutdowns: State Violence and Psychological Warfare Performed (March 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Clouds at the Border: Threatened by the Wall (Sept. 2019)
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Colonial Migrants At the Heart of Empire (Book Review) (Sept. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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(Links to an external site.)
Community Support and Creativity Are Key to Survival in the Rio Grande Valley (Aug. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Dismantling Anti-Blackness Together (June 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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Exiliados, Refugiados, Desplazados: Children and Migration Across the Americas (Oct. 2020)
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For Hemispheric Unity, a Change in U.S. Foreign Policy is Needed (Apr. 2022) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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From La Montaña, Guerrero to The Bronx: The Story of Victorio Hilario Guzmán (Jan. 2021)
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From Trump to Biden in Latin America (May 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Immigration Nation (Film Review)(Aug. 2020)
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Immigration Policy Must Look Beyond the Border (June 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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In a Washington State Prison, Latinos are Advocating for Mentorship and Education (Dec. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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Informal Recyclers Fight for Survival in Gentrifying Brooklyn (Apr. 2020)
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International Labor Solidarity in Action (Book Review) (Feb. 2022) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Latin American Immigrants in New York Face Covid-19 Crisis (Sept. 2020)
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Latinx Podcasts on the Rise (March 2022) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Life and Resistance for Migrant Families in the Rio Grande (Book Review) (June 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Local Paper Covers Pandemic’s Impact in Queens (June 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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Magazuelans: How Venezuelan Americans Embraced Trump as Their Savior (Jan. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Meeting Cubans 4 Trump (Oct. 2020)
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Migrant Networks in the Pandemic (July 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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On the Front Lines of Trump’s Immigration War in the U.S. Heartland (July 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Reducing Migrants’ Lives to One Grisly Photograph (July 2019)
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Reopening Mass Influx Facilities Goes Against Biden Administration Promises (March 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Slow Burn, Humid Pitch: Cultivating Care While Livin’ La COVIDa Loca (Sept. 2020)
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The Border Crossed US: The Case for Opening the U.S.-Mexico Border (Book Review) (Oct. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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The Case for Nuance in Immigrant Stories (Book Review) (Sept. 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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The Deadly Reverberations of U.S. Border Policy (Book Review) (Jan. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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The Deportation Machine (Book Review) (Sept. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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The Opportunistic Border Logic of the Pandemic (May 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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The Origins of an Early School-to-Deportation Pipeline (Nov. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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The Stain that Mardi Gras Covers Up: Worker Vulnerability in New Orleans (Feb. 2020)
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They Are Concentration Camps—and They Are Also Prisons (June 2019)
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Undoing Trump-Era Policies is Not Enough to Transform the Immigration System (March 2021)
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Unheard, Overlooked, Exposed (Dec. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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U.S. Asylum Law is a Biopolitical Crisis (Book Review) (June 2020)
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U.S. Foreign Policy in Latin America Still a Repeat of the Past (Dec. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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U.S. Immigration Detention System: “A Living Hell” (Feb. 2022) (Links to an external site.)
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U.S. Policy Toward Central America Continues Legacy of Displacement (Apr. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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“What better function for art at this time than as a voice for the voiceless”: The Work of Chicano Artist Malaquías Montoya (Feb. 2019) (Links to an external site.)
Mexico:
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23 Years of Impunity for Perpetrators of Acteal Massacre (Dec. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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A Labor Spring for Mexico’s Maquilas? (March 2019)
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A License to Pollute at Fortuna Silver Mines in Oaxaca (March 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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“A Project for Life” in Mexico City (Jan. 2020)
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An Independent Union Wins Landslide Victory Among Mexican GM Workers (Feb. 2022) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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As Mexican Pork Industry Expands, Environmental Concerns Follow (Sept. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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AMLO Pushes Ahead on Militarized Megaprojects (Aug. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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AMLO’s Crumbling Promise to Migrants (July 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Blurring the Division Between Church and State in AMLO’s Mexico (Feb. 2020)
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Downtown Juárez (Book Review) (March 2022) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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El Chapo and Mexico’s Drug War Spectacle (March 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Euphemisms of Violence: Child Migrants and the Mexican State (Dec. 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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For Mexico’s Striking University Workers, A War of Attrition Over Public Education (July 2019)
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For Mexico City Housing Movement, Metro Collapse is the Latest Symptom of Structural Inequity (June 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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“Green Tide” Reaches Mexico as Oaxaca Decriminalizes Abortion (Oct. 2019)
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Health and Economic Crisis in Mexico Hits Informal Sector Workers (March 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Horizontal Vertigo: A City Called Mexico (Book Review) (July 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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In Mexico, the Threats and Failures of Pre-Trial Detention (Jan. 2020)
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In Tapachula, Thousands of Haitian Migrants Wait to Be Resettled (Jan. 2022) (Links to an external site.)
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Indigenous Communities in Mexico Take up Arms to Defend the Monarch Forest (March 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Julián Leyzaola’s Dangerous Plans for Tijuana (May 2019)
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La Encrucijada’s Dilemma: Greenwashing Oil Palm in Chiapas (Apr. 2022) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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López Obrador’s Public Enemy Number One (Feb. 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Machista Media Get it Wrong on Feminist Protests in Mexico (Interview) (Aug. 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Maquiladoras and the Exploitation of Migrants on the Border (Oct. 2019)
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Maya Activist Groups Fight to Protect Indigenous Territorial Rights (Sept. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Mexican Police Who Massacred Guatemalan Migrants Get Their Guns from the U.S. (Apr. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Mexican Women Call on Government to End Violence (March 2020) (Links to an external site.)
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Mexico Bans Glysophate But Tolerates Other Agrochemicals (Jan. 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Mexico Labor Reform May not be Enough for Auto Logistics Workers (July 2021) (Links to an external site.)
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Mexico’s Fracking Impasse (Oct. 2020)
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Mexico’s Military Knew Ayotzinapa 43 Were Kidnapped, Then Covered It Up (Apr. 2022) (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)
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Mining Culture Wars Escalate in Oaxaca (Dec. 2019) (Links to an external site.)
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Narcos Mexico Is Not the Education We Need (Television Review) (March 2020)
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October
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