- Thoughtful investigative report about a central issue of the
2008 presidential race that examines the border in human terms
through a cast of colorful characters
- Asks and answers the core questions: Should we close the
border? Is a fence or wall the answer? Is the U.S. government
capable of fully securing the border?
- Reviews the political, economic, social, and cultural aspects
and discusses NAFTA, immigration policy, border security, and other
local, regional, national, and international issues
More than 250 million people cross the U.S.- Mexican border
legally each year, and as many as 10 million do so illegally,
making the border--"la frontera" to Mexicans--the most traversed
national boundary on the planet. In an age of terrorism and
economic uncertainty, that border is already one of the most hotly
debated issues in American politics and is certain to play a
prominent role in the 2008 campaign for president.
In 2007, David Danelo spent three months traveling the 1,952
miles that separate the United States and Mexico, beginning at Boca
Chica, Texas, and traveling to the westernmost limit at Border
Field State Park in California--a journey that took him across four
states and two countries through a world of rivers and canals,
mountains and deserts, highways and dirt roads, fences and border
towns. Here the border isn't just an abstraction thrown around in
political debates in Washington; it's a physical reality,
infinitely more complex than most politicians believe. Danelo's
reporting digs beneath the debate and attempts to explain the
border and related issues--from legal and illegal immigration to
NAFTA and border fences--as they are experienced by the people who
live and work there: businessmen, smugglers, Minutemen, migrants,
humanitarians, border patrol agents, government officials, and
everyday people in the U.S. and Mexico.
The divide is great, as Danelo makes clear, but so is the
opportunity. Refreshing in the new perspectives it offers and
captivating in its depiction of this vibrant, if troubled, region,
"The Border" is an essential starting point for understanding this
vital topic.
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