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Mexico

Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on this country.

 

  • ×
    Photos of the Flores family from the past are seen in their Chula Vista kitchen. Image by Amanda Cowan. United States, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Bridging the Border: A Family Divided

    Living Parallel Lives

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    December 24, 2019
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    Visitors to Playas de Tijuana stop by the border wall at Friendship Park to look over artwork Dec. 1. Friendship Park is located along the United States-Mexico border in the San Diego-Tijuana region and is a half-acre in size. Image by Amanda Cowan. Mexico, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Bridging the Border: A Family Divided

    Immigration Attorney: Few Legal Paths for Immigrants

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    Multiple Authors
    December 23, 2019
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    The Flores family pauses for a portrait outside Ramon’s apartment complex in Tijuana, Mexico. Family members are, clockwise from left, Leslie, 23, Lennes, 18, Raymond, 15, Ramon, 46, Enedis, 54, Rayma, 10, Edward, 12, and Kennedy, 16. The dogs are Canelo, left, and Bambi, wrapped in the blanket. Image by Amanda Cowan. Mexico, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Bridging the Border: A Family Divided

    Tijuana Tests Family Ties

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    Multiple Authors
    December 23, 2019
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    Rayma Flores spends a happy moment with her father, Ramon, and mother, Enedis, after Thanksgiving dinner. Rayma and her siblings can only see their father on the weekends in Tijuana, Mexico, because he was deported from the United States in August 2017. Image by Amanda Cowan. Mexico, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Bridging the Border: A Family Divided

    A Family Divided

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    Multiple Authors
    December 23, 2019
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  • Ramon Flores, 46, from left, formerly of Hazel Dell, sits down to Thanksgiving dinner at his apartment in Tijuana, Mexico, with his daughter, Rayma, 10, wife, Enedis, 54, daughter, Kennedy, 16, and son, Raymond, 15. His family, who now lives in Chula Vista, Calif., crossed the U.S.-Mexico border shortly before midnight Wednesday so they could be together for the American holiday. Image by Amanda Cowan. Mexico, 2019.
    English

    Project

    Bridging the Border: A Family Divided

    After Motel 6 gave his name to immigration agents in 2017, a Washington man’s family was torn apart...

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    Multiple Authors
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Bridging the Border: A Family Divided
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    Orlando Mendoza traveled hours by bus and train to attend classes at Hola Code, a software bootcamp in Mexico City. Today, he’s working at building a new life for himself with a job in information technology. Image by Erika Schultz. Mexico, 2019.
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    PART OF: Beyond The Border

    From Here and From There

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    Multiple Authors
    December 22, 2019
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    Migrants walk across International Bridge Two into Nuevo Laredo from Laredo. They requested asylum in the United States but were returned to Mexico to await their court proceedings. Image by Miguel Gutierrez Jr. United States, 2019.
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    PART OF: Broken Border

    Mexican Border Cities: Too Dangerous for Americans but Safe Enough for Migrants, U.S. Government Says

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    Multiple Authors
    December 11, 2019
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    Carlos Gudiño sells berries at a market in Connecticut. Image by Ingrid Holmquist. Mexico, 2018.
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    PART OF: Migrant Farm Workers and the Families Who Get Left Behind

    A Death in the Desert: The Risk of Migrant Workers on U.S. Farms

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    Multiple Authors
    November 26, 2019
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    A worker checks on cows at Drake Dairy Inc. in Elkhart Lake. Image by Mark Hoffman. United States, 2019.
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    PART OF: Dairyland in Distress

    Wisconsin's Dairy Industry Would Collapse Without the Work of Latino Immigrants — Many of Them Undocumented

    author image
    Maria Perez
    Grantee
    November 22, 2019
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    In this Oct. 10, 2019 photo, migrants wait for U.S. authorities to reopen a legal port of entry between Matamoros, Mexico, and Brownsville, Texas, after the bridge was closed briefly by U.S. authorities during a protest by migrants in Matamoros. Mexican gangs have adapted quickly to the new reality of masses of vulnerable migrants parking in the heart of their fiefdom, experts say, treating the travelers, often families with young children, like ATMs, ramping up kidnapping, extortion, and illegal crossings…
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    PART OF: Outsourcing Migrants

    Migrants Stuck in Lawless Limbo Within Sight of America

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    Multiple Authors
    November 18, 2019
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  • Erin Siegal McIntyre for WBEZ, Courtesy of veterans. Image by María Inés Zamudio.

    Event

    Journalist Maria Zamudio Focuses on 'Exiled Soldiers' Reporting During Boston Visit

    Read More
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    Estefanía Rebellón and students of the Yes We Can Foundation school. Image by Jaime Joyce. Mexico, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Home and Away

    Ready to Learn

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    Jaime Joyce
    Campus Consortium Advisory Council
    November 4, 2019
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