Fronteras Desk

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An award-winning public radio collaboration in the southwest focusing on the border, immigration and changing demographics.

Series

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7 Pieces

A multi-part series from the Fronteras Changing America Desk on the broken parts of our immigration system and the prospects for reform.

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The Fronteras Changing America Desk has produced a five part series on our immigration system and the prospects for change. Currently, an estimated 11 million people live in the United States without proper documentation. Visas available to bring in high skilled, or less-skilled, workers are hard to come by. Visa backlogs have separated families for upward of 20 years. We spent a staggering $18 billion on immigration enforcement last fiscal year. Yet people who want to cross, still do so. Our series, Broken Border, peels apart the complex tangle of the debate to explore what matters. We go from California farms to employers' offices in Arizona, ride along the southwest border with border patrol, open closed legislative doors to talk to key policy shapers, explore the impact of 11 million undocumented workers and ask: What does the Obama Administration owe the Latino voters who helped bring him back to Washington?

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The Fronteras Changing America Desk has produced a five part series on our immigration system and the prospects for change.

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8 Pieces

As various immigration reform proposals work their way through the U.S. Congress, Fronteras Desk dissects the proposals, the players, and the issues. A look at how comprehensive immigration reform could impact lives and livelihoods along the Southwest border and beyond.

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9 Pieces

Marking the 20th anniversary of the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement, the Fronteras Desk has a nine part series exploring the economic, cultural, environmental and social impact of NAFTA on the border region.

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5 Pieces

A Fronteras Desk series about the lives of parents and children -- some are American citizens -- when deportation affects the family.


Pieces

Caption: Alison Gamez says she will leave Arizona because of the state's immigration laws. Her husband came to the country illegally, but he has since received permission to work in the US. , Credit: Peter O'Dowd
A federal judge stopped the most controversial parts of Arizona's 2010 immigration law from going into effect. But supporters say that hasn't preve...

Bought by Listenwise


  • Added: May 01, 2013
  • Length: 04:11
  • Purchases: 1
Caption: Support group meeting for foreign students and their parents at the Biblioteca Benito Juárez in Tijuana., Credit: Joel Medina
In the last two years, more than 205,000 parents of American citizen children were deported from the United States. That means a new influx of Amer...

  • Added: Apr 23, 2013
  • Length: 03:47
Caption: A drawing by the American child of deported parents in Tijuana., Credit: Beth Caldwell
The majority of the 400,000 people deported from the U.S. in 2012 were adults, many with criminal records, but minors are sometimes caught up in th...

Bought by KBCS 91.3 FM Community Radio


  • Added: Apr 23, 2013
  • Length: 03:47
  • Purchases: 1
Caption: An American boy walks down a street in Guanajuato, Mexico with his father, a deported Mexican national., Credit: Erin Siegal McIntyre
Hundreds, if not thousands, of deported parents are trying to reunite with children left behind in the United States.

Bought by KOSU


  • Added: Apr 23, 2013
  • Length: 03:46
  • Purchases: 1
Caption: Gustavo Valencia has been in line for 18 years. And on at least two separate occasions, his priority date has been called. But he still waits for a visa., Credit: John Rosman
Both President Obama's and the Senate's proposals for immigration reform support a "path to citizenship" for undocumented immigrants in this countr...

Bought by KOSU


  • Added: Feb 07, 2013
  • Length: 04:01
  • Purchases: 1
Caption: A young man rallies for comprehensive immigration reform in 2010, Credit: Richard Morgan
Many critics and supporters of comprehensive immigration reform are looking back at the amnesty offered in 1986 for lessons for today.

Bought by KOSU


  • Added: Feb 07, 2013
  • Length: 03:58
  • Purchases: 1
Caption: Noel Stehly, an organic citrus and avocado farmer in northern San Diego County, says he's never tried to bring in guest workers because the process is cumbersome and expensive., Credit: Adrian Florido
One part of the immigration system widely seen as being in need of reform: seasonal guest workers.

Bought by KOSU and New Hampshire Public Radio


  • Added: Jan 28, 2013
  • Length: 04:18
  • Purchases: 2
Caption: Ross Tappan used to manage a dairy in Mesa, Ariz., that switched to using E-Verify., Credit: Jude Joffe Block
To avoid a future flow of illegal immigrant workers, employers must have a good way of certifying their workforce is legitimate. We look at Arizon...

Bought by KOSU


  • Added: Jan 28, 2013
  • Length: 04:09
  • Purchases: 1
Caption: Workers raised the gate on the border fence of the U.S.-Mexico boundary to clean away debris from a cross-border wash. Accumulated debris has knocked down fence segments in the past., Credit: Michel Marizco
We need a secure border before we can reform the immigration system. But it turns out, noone knows exactly what a secure border means.

Bought by WRST-FM Oshkosh and KOSU


  • Added: Jan 28, 2013
  • Length: 04:16
  • Purchases: 2
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What to do with the 11 million undocumented immigrants already in this country will be a critical component of immigration reform.

Bought by KUOW and KOSU


  • Added: Jan 28, 2013
  • Length: 04:03
  • Purchases: 2