Depending on whom you ask, anywhere between 100,000 to half a million Juarenses have left Mexico since drug violence exploded in 2008. In a tragic irony, neighboring El Paso is flourishing economically as Juárez descends further into terror.
Immigration
In-depth reporting on border issues, policies, communities, and the impact of immigration across the state, from The Texas Tribune.
Blood Lines: Prosperity Amid Peril
As the savage drug war rages on in Juárez, both the fun and the business have fled, bringing to El Paso, its sleepy sister city, a vibrant new culture and an economic boost. In a tragic irony, a measure of El Paso’s recent fortune results directly from the suffering of Juárez. But experts warn that El Paso leaders rely on Juárez’s decline at their own risk. Ultimately, as Juárez goes, so goes El Paso, they say.
TribBlog: Napolitano to Visit Border
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano will visit Texas’ border with Mexico on Thursday when she meets with customs officials and local law enforcement in Laredo.
HuTube: Perry on FOX Business
Gov. Rick Perry chats with the FOX Business Network’s Neil Cavuto about his latest poll numbers, the moratorium on deep water drilling and the cancellation of a Border Governors’ Conference that was going to take place in Arizona, until Mexican governors boycotted the meeting.
Charles Bowden: The TT Interview
Charles Bowden, author of Murder City: Ciudad Juárez and the Global Economy’s New Killing Fields, on how he keeps his sanity, when the narco-wars will end and Mexican President Felipe Calderón’s Pandora’s box.
Charles Bowden Part Ten
Reporter Charles Bowden on his coverage of Ciudad Juárez.
Charles Bowden Part Nine
Reporter Charles Bowden on his coverage of Ciudad Juárez.
Charles Bowden Part Eight
Reporter Charles Bowden on his coverage of Ciudad Juárez.
Charles Bowden Part Seven
Reporter Charles Bowden on his coverage of Ciudad Juárez.
Charles Bowden Part Six
Reporter Charles Bowden on his coverage of Ciudad Juárez.


