1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910465357603321

Titolo

Human rights : the U.S.-Mexico experience / / edited by William Paul Simmons and Carol Mueller

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : , : University of Pennsylvania Press, , 2014

©2014

ISBN

0812209982

Edizione

[1st edition]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (310 pages)

Collana

Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights

Disciplina

323.0972

Soggetti

Human rights - Mexico

Criminal justice, Administration of - Mexico

Undocumented immigrants - United States - Social conditions

Electronic books.

Mexico Foreign relations United States

United States Foreign relations Mexico

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Front matter -- CONTENTS -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Reflections on Immigration, Binational Policies, and Human Rights Tragedies -- Chapter 2. Sexual Violence Against Migrant Women and Children -- Chapter 3. Immigration Enforcement at the U.S.- Mexico Border: Where Human Rights and National Sovereignty Collide -- Chapter 4. Politics of Death in the Drug War: The Right to Kill and Suspensions of Human Rights in Mexico, 2000– 2012 -- Chapter 5. Migration, Violence, and “Security Primacy” at the Guatemala- Mexico Border -- Chapter 6. The Binational Roots of the Femicides in Ciudad Juárez -- Chapter 7. Reflections on Antiviolence Civil Society Organizations in Ciudad Juárez -- Chapter 8. The Persistence of Femicide amid Transnational Activist Networks -- Chapter 9. Transnational Advocacy for Human Rights in Contemporary Mexico -- Chapter 10. Restrictions on U.S. Security Assistance and Their Limitations in Promoting Changes to the Human Rights Situation in Mexico -- Conclusion: Multiple States of Exception, Structural Violence, and Prospects for Change -- Notes -- References -- List of Contributors -- Index -- Acknowledgments



Sommario/riassunto

Mexico ranks highly on many of the measures that have proven significant for creating a positive human rights record, including democratization, good health and life expectancy, and engagement in the global economy. Yet the nation's most vulnerable populations suffer human rights abuses on a large scale, such as gruesome killings in the Mexican drug war, decades of violent feminicide, migrant deaths in the U.S. desert, and the ongoing effects of the failed detention and deportation system in the States. Some atrocities have received extensive and sensational coverage, while others have become routine or simply ignored by national and international media. Binational Human Rights examines both well-known and understudied instances of human rights crises in Mexico, arguing that these abuses must be understood not just within the context of Mexican policies but in relation to the actions or inactions of other nations—particularly the United States. The United States and Mexico share the longest border in the world between a developed and a developing nation; the relationship between the two nations is complex, varied, and constantly changing, but the policies of each directly affect the human rights situation across the border. Binational Human Rights brings together leading scholars and human rights activists from the United States and Mexico to explain the mechanisms by which a perfect storm of structural and policy factors on both sides has led to such widespread human rights abuses. Through ethnography, interviews, and legal and economic analysis, contributors shed new light on the feminicides in Ciudad Juárez, the drug war, and the plight of migrants from Central America and Mexico to the United States. The authors make clear that substantial rhetorical and structural shifts in binational policies are necessary to significantly improve human rights. Contributors: Alejandro Anaya Muñoz, Luis Alfredo Arriola Vega, Timothy J. Dunn, Miguel Escobar-Valdez, Clara Jusidman, Maureen Meyer, Carol Mueller, Julie A. Murphy Erfani, William Paul Simmons, Kathleen Staudt, Michelle Téllez.