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710 Results
Migrant+Workers
Feeding America: How Immigrants Sustain US Agriculture
Farm labor shortages put pressure on the United States’ food security, the livelihoods of farmers and farmworkers, and the economies and identity of rural communities. In a new Center for the U.S and Mexico research paper, Alejandro Gutiérrez-Li, assistant professor at North Carolina State University, examines the crucial role played by Mexican immigrant farmworkers in putting food on American tables.
Alejandro Gutiérrez-Li July 19, 2024
Lithium Field
Chile’s New Lithium Strategy: A Market Boost or Miss?
Chile holds the world’s largest lithium reserves, yet the country’s current legal framework complicates the task of adding participants to boost lithium production. A commentary by nonresident fellow Benigna Cortés Leiss outlines the Chilean government’s new initiative to boost its lithium market share through collaborations between public and private sectors and questions its potential impacts on the lithium world market.
Benigna Cortés Leiss July 17, 2024
Trade+Ports
Nearshoring in Mexico: Seizing Opportunities and Facing Challenges
Nearshoring is gaining global economic significance, with Mexico poised to capitalize on this trend due to its proximity to the U.S., skilled work force, and other competitive factors. A brief commissioned by the Center for the U.S. and Mexico outlines these advantages and discusses the infrastructural challenges that Mexico must overcome to unlock its nearshoring potential.
Indira Romero, Jesús Antonio López Cabrera July 16, 2024
Oil+gas
The Power Problem: Nearshoring and Mexico’s Energy Sector
Nearshoring offers Mexico a major economic opportunity; however, current policy hindering power expansion, energy transition, and private investment forestalls this prospect. A report by the Center for the U.S. and Mexico on their collaborative workshop series with Tecnológico de Monterrey dissects the power sector’s critical role in nearshoring efforts and offers policy recommendations for a way forward.
Tony Payan, Rodrigo Montes de Oca, Rolando Fuentes, Roberto Duran-Fernandez July 3, 2024
USMX-Border+Wall
Can the Texas Border Strategy Achieve Its Aims?
Can Texas’ approach to U.S.-Mexico border relations really solve long-standing migration and fentanyl issues? This new brief from the Center for the U.S and Mexico — based on a conversation with R. Gil Kerlikowske, former Commissioner of Customs and Border Protection — examines Gov. Greg Abbott’s strategy, focusing on the deployment of buoys along the Rio Grande and their symbolism.
Tony Payan, Roselyn Ovalle July 2, 2024
This aerial view shows the camp of Deir Ballut for internally displaced people in the Afrin region of Syria's rebel-held northern Aleppo province, inundated following heavy rainfall on May 24, 2024.
Climate-Induced Displacement: A Conversation With Julia Blocher and Andrea Milan
Each year, millions of people migrate within and beyond their own countries because of rising temperatures and weather-related disasters. This new policy brief on climate-induced displacement from the Edward P. Djerejian Center for the Middle East explains the term “climate mobility,” distinguishes between voluntary and forced migration, and explores the challenges and opportunities presented by this reality of our times.
Ana Martín Gil, Kelsey Norman, Poema Sumrow, Sarah Sowell June 14, 2024
Solar power plant Maram
Toward Smart Sustainable Cities in the MENA Region
Rapid urbanization and expansion of cities in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has created new opportunities — along with environmental risks, lack of financial and natural resources, and social disparity. In a new issue brief, visiting research scholar Osamah Alsayegh explores how developing smart sustainable cities can bring social and economic benefits to the growing urban population.
Osamah Alsayegh June 6, 2024