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293 Index abuse, 31–32; of research participants, 25, 26–27; of migrants, 106, 107 advocacy, 45–46 agencies: border policing, 83–84 agency, 169, 193 agenda setting, 159 agents: change, 179 Ahome (Sin.), 238, 243 Altar (Son.), 15, 85, 186; border crossers in, 112–13, 114; public health in, 168, 169, 174–81, 185, 187, 188–89, 190–91, 192–93; as transit location, 170–71 anthropology/anthropologists, 13, 92, 96, 168; goals of, 121–23; and informants, 123–25, 138–39, 177–80; native, 126–27 anti-immigrant actions, 8, 87; in Arizona, 194–95, 206, 207–8, 211, 242, 245 Arizona, 84, 191; anti-immigrant laws, 8, 33, 160, 245; border enforcement, 102–3, 143; Border Patrol in, 85–87; business participation in, 208–18; health services, 186, 194–96; Mexican migrants in, 234, 237–38; migrant routes, 103–4; undocumented persons in, 207–8; women-owned businesses in, 206–7 Arizona SB 1070, 8, 33, 160 Arizona–Sonora border, 85, 93; unauthorized migrants on, 101–3, 110–18 Arizona State University Center for Population Dynamics, 242–43 auto/ethnography, 128–29; methodology, 126– 27 bandits, 10, 106, 108 beauty salons, 210, 211-18, 219 Belmont Report, 28 birth control, 261. See also contraceptives Border Contraceptive Access Study (BCAS), 250, 259, 262; methodologies, 251–58 border crossers, 11, 35; conditions, 12–13; in migrant shelters, 110–18; tragedy, 91–92; women, 108, 169, 170, 193 border enforcement, 3–4, 143, 237; Arizona and Sonora, 101–4 Border Forum, 92–93 Border Fulbright program, 67 borderlands, 55, 279 border life, 57–58 borders, 2, 3, 55, 66, 277; fear and protection of, 87–88; security of, 4, 152, 237, 276 Border Security Industrial Complex (BSIC), 60–61 border walls, 4, 16, 276 boundaries. See borders Bush administration, 223 businesses: immigration status and, 219–20; Mexican-owned, 208–10, 236; women-owned, 206–7, 210–18 business licenses, 220n2; beauty salons, 214–15, 216–17; immigration status and, 208, 217–18 Bustamante, Jorge, 107, 145, 151–52 California, 4, 106, 146, 234, 237; immigrant as threat in, 33–34; Sinaloans in, 235–36 294 • Index Camarena, Enrique “Kiki,” 129–30 Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), 75 Central Americans, 143, 150, 237, 278 Centro Communitario de Atención al Migrante y Necesitado (CCAMyN), 112, 190 Centro de Investigación de América del Norte (CISAN), 18, 146 Chatino speakers, 106 Chiapas, 105; migrants from, 175, 176–77 Chicano Brotherhood, the (TCB), 134 Chihuahua: migrants from, 237, 243 children, 4, 36, 37, 278 Choix, 236, 244 Ciudad Juárez (Chih.), 17, 34, 55, 59, 61, 157; contraceptive study in, 250, 251–53, 259; crime and violence in, 260–61 clandestine activity, 5, 9, 123–24 classism: in Mexico, 114–15 Coalición Derechos Humanos, 92 cocaine trafficking, 127, 133 Code of Federal Regulations, 28 Code of Personal Ethics for Border Researchers (CEBR), 9, 275, 277, 281–82, 283–84 codes of ethics, 9, 31–32, 275 codes of professional conduct, 5 Colegio de la Frontera Norte (COLEF), 18, 57; migration scholarship, 145, 146, 151 Colegio de la Frontera Norte de Ciudad Juárez: Visiting Researcher program, 67 Colegio de México, 145 Colegio de Michoacán, 145 Colegio de Sonora, El (COLSON): crossborder scholarship, 18–19; public health research by, 167–74, 187, 188–89 collaboration, 10–11; binational, 17–18, 43, 53–54, 57, 59, 62–67, 242–43, 279, 280 Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos, 108 community-based organizations (CBOs), 58 community-based participatory research (CBPR), 43–44, 56 community based research (CBR), 56 community health centers, 252, 253 community health workers. See promotores de salud compensation: day laborers, 272–73; for survey participants, 48, 116–17, 252 Concilio Latino de Salud. See National Alliance for Hispanic Health confidentiality, 179, 224, 257 Consejo Nacional de Población (CONAPO), 104, 105 consent, 27, 192; obtaining, 254–55 construction: jobs in, 244–45 content analysis (CA): of newspapers, 153–59 contraceptives: access to, 249–50, 251–59 Corrido del Armadillo, El (Saldivar), 131–32 Cosalá: migrants from, 235–36 counter-stories: in CRT methodology, 40–41 coyotes, 106, 108, 113 crime, 260–61 critical race theory (CRT), 40–41 cross-border organizing, 53, 58–59 Culiacán: migrants from, 235, 236, 238, 243 culture, 71; organizational, 61–62 data, 226; access and ownership, 265, 269–70; gathering of, 15–16; use of, 63–64 day laborers, 238, 272–73 dead: representation of, 95–96 death(s), 90–91, 95...

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