Mexico’s first female president faces critical issues, challenging US relationship

June 8, Jennifer Apperti, director of the SMU Dallas Mission Foods Texas-Mexico Center, for a piece outlining the challenges Mexico’s President-Elect Claudia Sheinbaum may face when she assumes the presidency in October. Published in the Austin American-Statesman under the heading Mexico’s first female president faces critical issues, challenging US relationship: https://tinyurl.com/278pturp 

 

Mexico’s presidential election has given the country a historic first: Claudia Sheinbaum becomes the country’s first woman president. That is an important milestone in a country that continues to struggle with gender inequality.

However, the lead-up to the June 2 vote made history for another reason: This election cycle —spanning from Sept. 2023 to May 2024— became the most violent one in the country’s history. There were 24 candidates killed in 2024 alone, and according to a joint study by Mexican think tanks México Evalúa, Data Cívica and Animal Político, a total of 573 people have suffered political violence since the electoral process began. Now, Mexico’s newly elected president has to face a country not only more polarized than before, but also one where criminal violence has spread into the country’s political life.

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New Trump immigration regulations would devastate refuge pathways

June 16, Natalie Nanasi, professor at SMU Dedman Law School with a specialty in immigration, for a piece critical of proposed new Trump Administration regulations that would devastate asylum pathways for refugees. Published in The Hill: https://bit.ly/2YK2aIo

After three and a half years of methodically chipping away at the rights and dignity of asylum seekers, the Trump administration has achieved its coup de grâce. Last week, the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security issued draft regulations that could effectively eradicate asylum law as we know it. 

The 161-paged document impacts nearly 900,000 individuals with pending asylum applications and countless others who may seek protection in the United States from persecution or torture they face in their home countries. . .

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