The Border Chronicle Weekly Roundup: June 5
The Border Chronicle hangs out with legendary journalist Amy Goodman, plus big tech and the "everywhere border" and a podcast about Latin American art and the borderlands and more!
If the Texas border was a war zone … then the men who died on Oct. 25, 2012, were the war’s first known casualties.
How a Texas butterfly sanctuary became the center of the resistance against Trump, Steve Bannon and the right-wing agenda at the border.
Spector, who specializes in Mexican asylum cases, said he expects more human rights defenders will request asylum after border opens this month to people with travel visas.
"There’s no clearly articulated vision of what the next two years is going to look like at the border," says the border policy expert of the Biden administration.
Kate Scott and other border residents are documenting the environmental damage. But Scott says they're left in the dark when it comes to the government's plan for remediation.
Rey Anzaldua and his family spent four years fighting off the Trump administration only to have their land in South Texas seized by the Biden administration to build a border wall.
A Q&A with Pamela Rivas. The Federal Government Wanted to Build a Border Wall on Her Family’s Land. After 13 Years, Rivas Finally Won It Back.
Republicans Are Counting on the #BorderCrisis for Midterm Gains
In Del Rio, the Border Patrol and Right-Wing Media Stoke White Panic, Yet Again, at the Border
“We need to reject the narrative that the border is a scary place that needs to be militarized.”
Border legislators, Veronica Escobar and Raul Grijalva, take on the behemoth.
Independent news, culture and context from the U.S.-Mexico border.