“Whoever Saves a Life, Saves a World”: On the Death of Carlos Spector, El Paso Immigration Attorney
He saved numerous lives by winning Mexican asylum cases that many said would be impossible to win.
DHS secretary Kristi Noem explaining what's to come in an address to border industry representatives: “We can go in, take you out of your home, and deport you out of this country.”
The Border Chronicle's Todd Miller does a live video tour of vendors promoting their products to the Department of Homeland Security.
Todd launches his first live video experiment from the expo.
Researchers launch a new program that uses AI and collaborative mapping to help border residents in need after flooding disasters.
Deadly rains leave part of the Texas-Mexico border in ruins, an acute water crisis in northwest Mexico, and a ferocious dust storm on the road to a water conference in Ciudad Juárez.
Take a stroll through a dusty water crisis in the Texas-Chihuahua borderlands from El Paso and Ciudad Juárez to Boquilla and the Sierra Tarahumara.
"All water carries stories, voices, and drowned towns. To narrate what happens in a basin, you have to follow its waters' full course." An essay by Mexican writer Diego Rodríguez Landeros.
"It feels like we're on our own," said a Texas border resident.
A gas terminal tests Sheinbaum's environmental pledge, expert Q&A on financial border surveillance, and a live podcast with authors Luis Alberto Urrea and Gary Nabhan. Plus more news from the border.
The Border Chronicle’s Todd Miller and Melissa del Bosque discuss cultural resistance in the borderlands with literary heroes Urrea and Nabhan.
"I really do not see this changing the world by any means, but it does expand surveillance of border residents," says Anthony of treasury policy that takes effect on April 14.
A gas-export terminal threatening the “world’s aquarium” tests Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum's pledge to protect the environment.
Independent news, culture and context from the U.S.-Mexico border.