Sunday, March 8, 2009

This spring break I was planning on going on a humanitarian trip with fellow students to San Juan, Texas. For one week, we'd work for an organization called L.U.P.E. passing out fliers, spreading awareness for immigrant's rights, and marching in a rally. Unfortunately, recent surges of violence near the U.S./Mexico border have caused the trip to be canceled.
For the past few years, gang fighting related to the drug trade has riddled many Mexican cities with violence and instability. When the issue was brought up at a meeting last week, many of us (myself included) had previously been completely unaware. Feeling like a little guilty for being uninformed (especially since I'm a journalism student!), I immediately did some research. In Ciudad Juarez, a city that borders El Paso in the U.S., the number of murders rose from 300 in 2007 to 1500 in 2008. The number of murders related to organized crime in Mexico as a whole reached some 6,000 last year. Fighting occurs in the streets, in the bars and in peoples homes. Businesses are failing due to customer's fear of leaving their homes. A good online article about the violence can be found here.
I expect most journalists and informed individuals already know about this issue, but I think a surprising amount of others don't. Reportage of the violence seems rare. When doing my own research online, good articles were hard to come by. One factor at work here may be that reportage of issues like this is often eclipsed by stories from Iraq, Afghanistan and Gaza. The idea is interesting to me, and I might look into this topic futher for my research paper. Perhaps a comparison of the reportage from each area, looking at how many articles come out and also how the articles are written, would be worth researching.

3 comments:

  1. That would be a really great topic for your research paper. I know when I heard the numbers comparing Obama coverage versus McCain coverage, it was really surprising.
    "Challenge the numbers," as both Follis and Houston have said.

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  2. You might want to check out the New York Times' coverage of the Mexican cartels. I usually see a story or two every month. Also, 60 Minutes ran this piece recently: http://www.tv.com/video/ebrCRIwz_sIzGnGlR2Nob7VCVBiuIm_V/101/22529/mexicos-drug-war?o=cbs&category=all

    It's pretty unreal how deep the corruption runs. I believe I've seen a few stories about the violence spilling over the border as well.

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  3. Thanks for sharing this!

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