Josiah Heyman on Border Patrol Culture and a Positive Vision of the Borderlands

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This episode of CMSOnAir features an interview with Josiah Heyman, Professor of Anthropology, Endowed Professor of Border Trade Issues, and Director of the University of Texas, El Paso’s Center for Interamerican and Border Studies. CMS’s communications coordinator Emma Winters asks Josiah Heyman about a CMS Essay he authored with Jeremy Slack and Daniel E. Martínez. The essay, titled “Why Border Patrol Agents and CBP Officers Should Not Serve as Asylum Officers,” examines findings from the Migrant Border Crossing Survey and concludes that US Border Patrol agents and other CBP officers should not serve as asylum officers because they “abuse migrants, physically and verbally, with significant frequency.” In the episode, Josiah Heyman also presents a positive vision of the US-Mexico border and lifts up Annunciation House as an example of the openness and generosity of border communities. Related Publications: Why Border Patrol Agents and CBP Officers Should Not Serve as Asylum Officers https://cmsny.org/publications/heyman-slack-martinez-062119/ A Voice of the US Southwestern Border: The 2012 “We the Border: Envisioning a Narrative for Our Future” Conference https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/233150241300100201 Does the United States Need to Invest More in Border Enforcement? https://cmsny.org/publications/essay-kerwin-warren-051619/