16 results on '"Leutert, Stephanie"'
Search Results
2. The Border Patrol's Migrant Death Undercounting in South Texas.
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
BORDER patrols ,BOUNDARY disputes ,RESEARCH questions ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Executive Summary: For the past 25 years, the Border Patrol has tracked migrant deaths along the US-Mexico border. For nearly the same amount of time, it has also faced criticisms that it failed to capture the true number of migrant deaths in its tally. This article focuses on these undercounting criticisms and asks two questions: (1) How many documented migrant death cases are left out of Border Patrol's official data? And (2) what factors lead to the Border Patrol's migrant death undercounting? In particular, the article focuses on three South Texas counties: Brooks County, Kenedy County, and Maverick County. To answer the research questions, this article relies on comparative data analysis. In particular, it compares two person-level datasets: the Border Patrol's dataset on migrant deaths from 2009 to 2017 and county-level records from the Brooks County Sheriff's Office, the Kenedy County Sheriff's Office, and Maverick County Justices of the Peace over the same period. It then attempts to match each county-level record to a recorded death in the Border Patrol's dataset. Using this process, the article quantifies migrant death undercounting in South Texas, highlights geographic and temporal trends, and tracks the uncounted cases' specific characteristics. From 2009 to 2017, this comparative data analysis confirmed that the Border Patrol was undercounting migrant deaths across the three South Texas counties. Specifically, the article finds that the Border Patrol failed to include 139 cases, which totaled 19 percent of the counties' 749 recorded migrant deaths during the study period. This undercounting ranged from 16 percent in Brooks County to 24 percent in Maverick County and 29 percent in Kenedy County, with fluctuating rates over time. The uncounted cases also had specific characteristics. In particular, they were more likely to be skeletal remains, lack an identification, and be discovered by an external entity. These characteristics highlight the various factors behind the Border Patrol's undercounting, such as issues with the Border Patrol's migrant death definition, inconsistent data collection from external entities, and the agency's low prioritization of migrant death tracking. To address and remedy the Border Patrol's migrant death undercounting requires tackling each underlying factor. First and foremost, this article recommends that the Border Patrol fully train its agents on the agency's migrant death definition and ensure consistent and standardized outreach to external entities. Further, it recommends that the Border Patrol improve its migrant death count's accuracy through additional operational changes. These proposed changes include making "accurate migrant death counts" an official objective for the Border Patrol's Missing Migrant Program, prioritizing a two-way information-sharing process with county-level officials, retroactively including missed migrant deaths in the official count, and publishing more detailed person-level data on migrant deaths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Women's Involvement in Migrant Kidnapping in Mexico: A Gender Perspective
- Author
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Yates, Caitlyn, primary and Leutert, Stephanie, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Border Patrol’s Migrant Death Undercounting in South Texas
- Author
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Kerwin, Donald, Martinez, Daniel E., Siegert, Courtney C., and Leutert, Stephanie
- Abstract
For the past 25 years, the Border Patrol has tracked migrant deaths along the US-Mexico border. For nearly the same amount of time, it has also faced criticisms that it failed to capture the true number of migrant deaths in its tally. This article focuses on these undercounting criticisms and asks two questions: (1) How many documented migrant death cases are left out of Border Patrol’s official data? And (2) what factors lead to the Border Patrol’s migrant death undercounting? In particular, the article focuses on three South Texas counties: Brooks County, Kenedy County, and Maverick County.To answer the research questions, this article relies on comparative data analysis. In particular, it compares two person-level datasets: the Border Patrol’s dataset on migrant deaths from 2009 to 2017 and county-level records from the Brooks County Sheriff’s Office, the Kenedy County Sheriff’s Office, and Maverick County Justices of the Peace over the same period. It then attempts to match each county-level record to a recorded death in the Border Patrol’s dataset. Using this process, the article quantifies migrant death undercounting in South Texas, highlights geographic and temporal trends, and tracks the uncounted cases’ specific characteristics.From 2009 to 2017, this comparative data analysis confirmed that the Border Patrol was undercounting migrant deaths across the three South Texas counties. Specifically, the article finds that the Border Patrol failed to include 139 cases, which totaled 19 percent of the counties’ 749 recorded migrant deaths during the study period. This undercounting ranged from 16 percent in Brooks County to 24 percent in Maverick County and 29 percent in Kenedy County, with fluctuating rates over time. The uncounted cases also had specific characteristics. In particular, they were more likely to be skeletal remains, lack an identification, and be discovered by an external entity. These characteristics highlight the various factors behind the Border Patrol’s undercounting, such as issues with the Border Patrol’s migrant death definition, inconsistent data collection from external entities, and the agency’s low prioritization of migrant death tracking.To address and remedy the Border Patrol’s migrant death undercounting requires tackling each underlying factor. First and foremost, this article recommends that the Border Patrol fully train its agents on the agency’s migrant death definition and ensure consistent and standardized outreach to external entities. Further, it recommends that the Border Patrol improve its migrant death count’s accuracy through additional operational changes. These proposed changes include making “accurate migrant death counts” an official objective for the Border Patrol’s Missing Migrant Program, prioritizing a two-way information-sharing process with county-level officials, retroactively including missed migrant deaths in the official count, and publishing more detailed person-level data on migrant deaths.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Back and Forth
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
United States. Customs and Border Protection -- Powers and duties ,Mexican-American border region -- Safety and security measures -- Emigration and immigration ,Immigration policy -- Political aspects ,Asylum, Right of -- Political aspects ,Border security -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Political aspects ,Government regulation ,Science and technology ,Social sciences - Abstract
The Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) were devised in secret. The harsh spotlight on U.S. immigration policy makes them hard to roll back. On January 29, 2019, Carlos Gomez Perdomo, a [...]
- Published
- 2021
6. Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s Migratory Policy in Mexico, PRP 216
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
public affairs ,Migratory ,Texas ,Mexico ,Migration - Abstract
On December 1, 2018, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador assumed office and promised to change Mexico’s migratory policy. Initially, López Obrador championed a humanitarian approach to migration, placing migrant rights defenders in key policy positions and directing INM to issue an unprecedented number of humanitarian visas. However, this approach did not last. By June 2019, amid intense U.S. pressure, the López Obrador administration shifted its migratory strategy to an enforcement-based approach. As a result, Mexico has increased its number of apprehensions, detentions, and deportations. This report will detail López Obrador’s migratory policy and its consequences during his administration’s first year in office. This report’s first chapter focuses on Central Americans’ decisions to migrate to Mexico and the United States. It covers the factors that historically led people to leave their homes, including civil wars and natural disasters, which set in motion today’s migration patterns. It also looks at the current factors driving migration, such as gang and gender-based violence, political instability, and a lack of economic opportunity. The report’s second chapter outlines Mexico’s legal framework for migration, which guides the López Obrador administration’s response to Central American migration. It also provides an overview of each Mexican federal agency involved in migratory policy. This report’s third chapter covers the López Obrador administration’s migratory policies, starting with the initial push toward a more humanitarian focused policy. It also explores the López Obrador administration’s Central American development programs and the mounting challenges for Mexico’s underfunded refugee resettlement agency. Finally, the chapter also outlines the administration’s shift to an enforcement strategy and the National Guard’s deployment to the southern border. The fourth chapter chronicles these migratory policies’ effects. It covers the policies’ effects for Mexico’s foreign relations, state and local level governments, civil society organizations, Mexican citizens, and Central American migrants transiting through the country. In particular it details how these policies have shifted migrants’ transit routes, increased crimes against migrants, and ongoing xenophobic attitudes in Mexico. This report concludes with a series of recommendations for improving Mexico’s migratory policies. These include: 1) putting Mexico’s Ministry of the Interior back in control of the country’s migratory policy; 2) strengthening INM’s commitment to human rights through improved training and better infrastructure; 3); increasing the number of legal channels for Central Americans to work in Mexico; 4) expanding funding for Mexico’s refugee resettlement agency; 5) streamlining Central American development programs; and 6) reducing the National Guard’s role in migration enforcement.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Migrant Protection Protocols: Implementation and Consequences for Asylum Seekers in Mexico, PRP 218
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
public affairs ,Migrant ,Asylum ,Texas ,Mexico - Abstract
In November 2018, the United States and Mexico negotiated the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP). Before MPP, asylum seekers were allowed to wait in the United States during their asylum cases. However, with MPP, asylum seekers are now forced to wait in Mexican border cities as their cases move through the U.S. immigration system. In January 2019, U.S. officials began to implement MPP in San Diego and then extended the program across the rest of the border. As of April 2020, more than 64,000 asylum seekers had been returned to Mexico as part of the program. The majority of the asylum seekers returned to Mexico under MPP are from the Northern Triangle of Central America, although individuals from other nationalities have also been put in the program. As of March 2020, the highest number of MPP returnees were from Honduras, accounting for 35 percent of individuals in the program. This was followed by asylum seekers from Guatemala (24 percent), Cuba (12.7 percent), and El Salvador (12.5 percent). U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers have exempted some groups from MPP, including unaccompanied minors, Mexican citizens, non-Spanish speakers (although Brazilians were eventually included), and asylum seekers in certain “special circumstances.” However, CBP officers have discretion regarding who is subject to the program, and these exemptions have not been consistently implemented. Additionally, CBP officers have also included members of “highrisk populations” in MPP, such as pregnant women, LGBTQ+ individuals, minors, and people who are disabled. Once asylum seekers are returned to Mexico, they face various challenges. Although the Mexican Migratory Law of 2011 guarantees asylum seekers the right to healthcare and education in Mexico, it can be difficult to access these services. Asylum seekers are also responsible for acquiring their own housing, even though they often have few resources. Further, they must navigate these situations while at risk of violence from criminal organizations or predatory actors. Criminal groups often target asylum seekers because they have no local ties or community and because they often have friends and family in the United States who can pay their ransom. This report recommends that MPP be immediately discontinued. However, understanding that this may be difficult in the short term, this report provides additional recommendations to address the most egregious conditions under MPP.These include improving safety for asylum seekers, excluding at-risk populations, and providing asylum seekers with greater access to due process and legal representation.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Migrant Caravans in Mexico, PRP 217
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
Caravans ,public affairs ,Migrant ,Texas ,Mexico - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Implementation and Legacy of Mexico’s Southern Border Program, PRP 208
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
public affairs ,Texas ,Mexico ,Border - Abstract
Over the last two decades, Mexico has enacted multiple domestic programs and international initiatives to manage the movement of migrants and illicit goods across its southern border states. In July 2014, Mexico launched its most recent major initiative, the Southern Border Program (Programa Frontera Sur), amid the arrival of an unprecedented number of Central American minors traveling through Mexico to the U.S.-Mexico border. This report provides an analysis of Mexico’s Southern Border Program, setting it within a historical context, describing the program and its consequences, and examining its legacy.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. A Gender Perspective of Migrant Kidnapping in Mexico
- Author
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Yates, Caitlyn, primary and Leutert, Stephanie, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Trump Has It Backward: Many Migrants Are Victims of Crime
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
Security guards ,Kidnapping ,General interest - Abstract
Byline: STEPHANIE LEUTERT In June, Josue, a 21-year-old Honduran, reached a safe house in the Mexican border city of Reynosa, Tamaulipas. He was there with 11 other Central American migrants. [...]
- Published
- 2018
12. A Gender Perspective of Migrant Kidnapping in Mexico.
- Author
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Yates, Caitlyn and Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
GENDER ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,IMMIGRANTS ,WOMEN criminals ,KIDNAPPING - Abstract
Despite its frequency in Mexico, research on migrant kidnapping is scant. We estimate that up to 250,000 migrants may have been kidnapped between 2006 and 2018. Even less is known about women as perpetrators in kidnapping operations. Moreover, in Mexico, research that examines the relationship between gender, transit migration, and kidnapping focuses almost exclusively on victimization, and is centered on the male as the perpetrator. This article breaks with both narratives by examining women's participation in migrant kidnappings in Mexico through an original dataset of 388 cases. Women were present as perpetrators in 30 percent of the cases, participating in operationally important but also gendered activities, like recruiting potential victims or collecting ransom money. By exploring kidnappers' demographic characteristics, this article presents the first exploration between migrant kidnapping and female offenders in Mexico. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. DEPORTED OR SUPPORTED: AN ANALYSIS OF DEPORTATIONS IN THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION.
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
DEPORTATION ,IMMIGRATION law ,CRIME - Abstract
Throughout President Obama's time in office, his deportation policy has simultaneously earned him both the title of "Deporter in Chief " and accusations of being soft on immigration enforcement. To untangle what is actually occurring, this paper uses U.S. Department of Homeland Security data to map and analyze the various deportation narratives circulating in the media. The paper finds that the number of individuals deported from the United States actually fell during the Obama administration, but the consequences for many of the deported became much harsher. It also argues that the administration's prioritization of recent border crossers could ultimately reduce deportations' strain on communities. Finally, the paper concludes that while the Obama administration is indeed targeting criminals for deportation, it is important to keep in mind the wide range of crimes--including immigration and non-violent offenses--that can constitute criminality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
14. Why Are So Many Migrants Leaving Guatemala? A Crisis in the Coffee Industry Is One Reason.
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Published
- 2018
15. Letter from the Editor.
- Author
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Leutert, Stephanie
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations -- Periodicals ,DRONE warfare - Abstract
An introduction is presented where the author discusses issues in periodical "Yale Journal of International Affairs" including U.S. drone policy and women's empowerment and relevance of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
- Published
- 2016
16. Open Season.
- Author
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Corchado, Alfredo and Leutert, Stephanie H.
- Subjects
- *
PETROLEUM reserves , *FOREIGN investments , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *DRUG traffic , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
The article discusses the opening of petroleum reserves in the northeastern region of Mexico to foreign investors. Rancher Juan Carlos takes note that oil and gas industrial development may drive out criminal elements and Gulf drug cartels. Texas A&M University rangeland biologist Fred Bryant, Audubon International Alliances Program vice president John Beavers and Pronatura Noreste general director Magdalena Rovalo express concerns about the impact on biodiversity and depletion of groundwater.
- Published
- 2015
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