What challenges has Mexico faced as a country of transit and destination migration, including in the context of COVID-19?
This webinar will discuss recent trends in migration to Mexico, Mexican asylum system and migrants’ integration in local communities. Dr. Piotr Plewa (DUCIGS, Sanford) will talk with three country experts: Maureen Meyer (Washington Office for Latin America), Alejandra Macías Delgadillo (Asylum Access) and Ramón Marquez (Independent Human Rights Defender). Special attention will be given to the lesser- known Southern Mexico.
About the Speakers
Alejandra Macías Delgadillo
Executive Director, Asylum Access Mexico
Alejandra holds a Masters in Human Rights at the Ibero-American University (Mexico City). She studied for her Law Degree in the Autonomous University of San Luis Potosi Mexico. She has taken gender studies at the United Nations Latin American Institute for the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders (ILANUD).
Alejandra is Mexico’s leading expert on refugee rights and asylum law. As the founder and executive director of one of Latin America’s leading refugee rights organizations, she has made numerous appearances before the United Nations and international human rights bodies as as an authority in the field.
Ramón Marquez
Independent Human Rights Defender
Ramón Marquez is a human rights defender and an expert on migration issues in the southern Mexico/Northern Triangle region. Originally from Spain, in 2011 after living in several countries, he settled in Mexico. In 2015, he assumed the direction of La 72, an initiative based on the values of Franciscan spirituality that defends and promotes the rights of migrants, asylum seekers and refugees on the southeast border of Mexico. He combined his management work in the field with his advocacy work representing La 72 in national and international spaces such as the UN. Ramon holds a BA in History and an MA in Pedagogy from the Complutense University of Madrid. He completed his academic training as an Assistant Professor in South Carolina, United States.
Maureen Meyer
Director for Mexico and Migrant Rights, Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA)
Maureen Meyer directs WOLA’s Mexico program with a special focus on analyzing U.S.-Mexico security policies and their relation to violence, corruption, and human rights violations in Mexico. She promotes justice for human rights violations in Mexico and also carries out advocacy work regarding U.S. security assistance to Mexico. As part of the program she co-directs WOLA’s work on border security and migration and advocates for greater protections for migrants and asylum seekers in Mexico and in U.S. borderlands.
Ms. Meyer has extensive experience addressing human rights, rule of law, security cooperation, border security and migration issues and works closely with various human rights, migrant rights, and public security organizations and networks in the region. Since 2015 she has served as a member of the Citizens’ Council of Mexico’s National Migration Institute (INM).
Before joining WOLA in 2006, Ms. Meyer lived and worked for five years in Mexico City, primarily with the Miguel Agustin Pro Juarez Human Rights Center. She has an M.A. in International Development from American University and a B.A. in Anthropology and Spanish from the University of Arizona.
Piotr Plewa
Visiting Research Scholar, Duke University Center for International and Global Studies
Dr. Plewa specializes in international labor migration. He taught the subject as a Visiting Scholar at the University of Delaware and has published in academic journals including International Migration, Journal of Comparative Population Studies, and the Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration.
Most recently, Dr. Plewa authored Migration in the Maldives, the first comprehensive study of migration to the Maldives (forthcoming). The study was commissioned by International Organization for Migration and Maldivian Ministry of Economic Development as a part of a broader effort to enhance the Maldivian government’s ability to collect migration data and develop evidence-based labor migration policies.
Prior to his work in the Maldives, Dr. Plewa gained extensive experience in migration policy research through his work for the World Bank, International Labor Organization (ILO), International Organization for Migration (IOM), International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD), and Poland’s Ministry of Labor. Among others, he estimated migration costs of migrant workers from several countries in Latin America, Africa and Europe to Spain, as a part of a broader World Bank – ILO effort to approximate and reduce migration costs incurred by migrant workers. The United Nations has recently recognized the reduction of migration costs as a part of Sustainable Development Goal to reduce inequality within and among countries.
This event is this year's first installment of the ongoing Rethinking Development Seminar Series organized by the Duke Center for International Development (DCID) and Duke University Center for International and Global Studies (DUCIGS). This event is also supported by Sanford School of Public Policy and the Duke Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS).
Contact name
More event info
Unit
- Duke University Center for International and Global Studies
- Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS)
- Rethinking Development Seminar Series