NPR Series: Borderland /tags/npr-series-borderland NPR Series: Borderland en-US Copyright »Ê¹ÚÍøÖ·/Community Radio for Northern Colorado 2020 Fri, 28 Mar 2014 07:25:00 GMT Born From The Border, Tijuana Grows In New Ways /npr-news/2014-03-28/born-from-the-border-tijuana-grows-in-new-ways The city is so close to the U.S. border fence that it practically leans on it. Even as Tijuana diversifies, its economy still relies on the frontier. Its residents are the perfect border citizens. Fri, 28 Mar 2014 07:25:00 GMT /npr-news/2014-03-28/born-from-the-border-tijuana-grows-in-new-ways Steve Inskeep Crossing The Desert: Why Brenda Wanted Border Patrol To Find Her /npr-news/2014-03-27/crossing-the-desert-why-brenda-wanted-border-patrol-to-find-her Initially, she ran from agents in her attempt to illegally enter the U.S. But after three days alone in the Arizona desert, Brenda lit a fire to get their attention. Her story is not uncommon. Thu, 27 Mar 2014 06:57:00 GMT /npr-news/2014-03-27/crossing-the-desert-why-brenda-wanted-border-patrol-to-find-her Steve Inskeep From Pancho Villa To Panda Express: Life In A Border Town /npr-news/2014-03-26/from-pancho-villa-to-panda-express-life-in-a-border-town Columbus, New Mexico, has a rich border history. Pancho Villa stormed across in 1916. Today, kids on the Mexico side take a bus — driven by the Columbus mayor — across the border to go to school. Wed, 26 Mar 2014 07:39:00 GMT /npr-news/2014-03-26/from-pancho-villa-to-panda-express-life-in-a-border-town Steve Inskeep On The Mend, But Wounds Of Violence Still Scar Juarez /npr-news/2014-03-24/on-the-mend-but-wounds-of-violence-still-scar-juarez Juarez, Mexico — terrifyingly violent a few years ago — is quieter now. But life across the Rio Grande from El Paso, Texas, is still difficult for many. Mon, 24 Mar 2014 07:58:00 GMT /npr-news/2014-03-24/on-the-mend-but-wounds-of-violence-still-scar-juarez Steve Inskeep At The Border, The Drugs Go North And The Cash Goes South /npr-news/2014-03-20/at-the-border-the-drugs-go-north-and-the-cash-goes-south U.S. border officials are constantly on alert for drugs coming in from Mexico. But they are also on the lookout for huge sums of cash leaving the U.S. and trickling back into Mexican communities. Thu, 20 Mar 2014 09:00:00 GMT /npr-news/2014-03-20/at-the-border-the-drugs-go-north-and-the-cash-goes-south John Burnett A U.S. Border Shelter That Attracts Asylum Seekers Far And Wide /2014-03-20/a-u-s-border-shelter-that-attracts-asylum-seekers-far-and-wide Nuns run La Posada Providencia, a shelter in south Texas, just across from Mexico. But the asylum seekers are a veritable United Nations, coming from places like Ethiopia, Albania and Nepal. Thu, 20 Mar 2014 09:00:00 GMT /2014-03-20/a-u-s-border-shelter-that-attracts-asylum-seekers-far-and-wide Steve Inskeep 'Saint Death' Now Revered On Both Sides Of U.S.-Mexico Frontier /npr-news/2014-03-19/saint-death-now-revered-on-both-sides-of-u-s-mexico-frontier Santa Muerte, or Saint Death, used to be an underground folk saint in Mexico. Now she's also popular in the U.S. So popular, in fact, that the Vatican has denounced her. Wed, 19 Mar 2014 12:45:00 GMT /npr-news/2014-03-19/saint-death-now-revered-on-both-sides-of-u-s-mexico-frontier John Burnett Remembering The Alamo With A Texas Historian /2014-03-19/remembering-the-alamo-with-a-texas-historian At The Alamo in San Antonio, Texas, historian Frank de la Teja explains how the dividing line between the United States and Mexico came to be drawn where it is. Wed, 19 Mar 2014 11:24:00 GMT /2014-03-19/remembering-the-alamo-with-a-texas-historian Steve Inskeep Borderland: A Journey Along The Changing Frontier /npr-news/2014-03-19/borderland-a-journey-along-the-changing-frontier Morning Edition's Steve Inskeep traveled the length of the U.S.-Mexico border to explore how the two countries are linked — and how they are separated. Wed, 19 Mar 2014 11:16:00 GMT /npr-news/2014-03-19/borderland-a-journey-along-the-changing-frontier Steve Inskeep