PODCAST · society
Journal of the Southwest Radio
by Southwest Center
The Journal of the Southwest Radio Hour brings the voices of researchers, educators, activists and community members working to better understand the region’s past and envision possible new futures.
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54
Colin Deeds - The Border: Binational Problems, Binational Solutions
Historian and anthropologist Carlos Vélez- Ibáñez famously stated that the U.S.-Mexico border is only two grandmothers old. Those grandmothers would recognize many things about the 21st century border, but other aspects would seem as strange to them as the technology, slang, and styles of their great-great-grandchildren. Yet the border is, as Gloria Anzaldúa and Homi Bhabha have both written, a third space unto itself, not fully of either country, but fully participating in both cultures, lifeways, economies, histories, foodways, and facing the shared challenges that arrive from distant capitals. Jennifer Jenkins talks in this episode with Colin Deeds, a lifelong Arizona resident and longtime interpreter of the U.S., Mexico. He holds degrees in anthropology and Latin American studies from the University of Arizona and has studied in Argentina, worked as an archaeologist for the National Park Service, and has conducted research in Mexico on politics and migration for many years. Colin is the Assistant Director and Director of Graduate Studies in the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Arizona.
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53
Liliana López Ruelas: Building Community in Tucson´s News Desert
On April 25, 2023, a phone call from an out-of-state number ended La Estrella de Tucsón, leaving the city without a Spanish-language newspaper. For Liliana López Ruelas, who had spent years as an editor there, it was a moment of frustration—but also of determination. Host Carlos Quintero speaks with Liliana about what happened next: a return to school, a master's degree at the University of Arizona, and the launch of Somos Tucson, a digital news outlet focused on serving Tucson's Latino community with útil, celebratory journalism. Born in Douglas and raised in Agua Prieta, Liliana shares her journey across borders, from Mexico City's political magazines to Tucson's newsrooms, and why she now embraces her identity as a Latina journalist. This is a conversation about community journalism, collaborative resistance, and the power of staying close to the stories that matter most.
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52
Erica Franco: La Estrella Bakery and the Art of Baking Belonging
Since 1986, La Estrella Bakery has been much more than a place to buy pan dulce, it’s been a pillar of Tucson’s cultural life, a space of ritual, memory, and early morning conversations over conchitas and cuernitos. As we celebrate Hispanic Heritage month, host Carlos Quintero speaks with Erica Franco, second-generation member of the family behind La Estrella, about what it means to carry on a tradition baked in love, community, and resilience. Erica shares stories of 3 a.m. baking shifts, drawings from kindergarten fans, and the return to the barrio bakery where it all began. This is a conversation about food, but also about family, belonging, and the quiet power of staying close to your roots.
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51
Don Unger - Critical Reclamation: Uranium, Storytelling, and Healing on the Navajo Nation
In this powerful conversation, Jennifer Jenkins, director of the Southwest Center, speaks with Don Unger, recent PhD and environmental historian, about his groundbreaking research on uranium mining reclamation on the Navajo Nation. Unger discusses the ethics of storytelling, the balance between technical and spiritual approaches to healing the land, and his concept of Critical Reclamation Studies, a framework grounded in both Western policy and Navajo cosmology. Together, they explore the lived realities of land restoration, long drives and “cabin conversations,” and the wisdom of community leaders like Mr. Melvin Yazzie and Mr. Ernest Greyeyes. This episode opens a window into environmental justice, language, and the ongoing legacy of Cold War uranium mining in the Southwest.
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50
Roberto Wolf: Protecting the Jaguar in Northern Mexico
In this episode, we talk with Roberto Wolfe, Mexico General Manager for the Northern Jaguar Project, a binational conservation effort based in Tucson, Arizona, and Sahuaripa, Sonora. NJP’s mission is to preserve and recover the world’s northernmost population of jaguars, an apex predator and keystone species whose survival supports entire ecosystems. Through partnerships with local ranchers, environmental education in Sonoran schools, and long-term scientific research --including extensive use of camera traps-- NJP protects over 56,000 acres of core jaguar habitat in the Sierra Madre foothills. Roberto grew up in Mexico City and began his journey into wildlife care as a teenage volunteer at Chapultepec Zoo. Trained in veterinary science, he brings deep knowledge of big cat biology and a passion for transboundary conservation. As jaguar habitats across the Americas shrink due to deforestation, development, and border infrastructure, Roberto helps lead efforts to ensure these elusive cats continue to roam from Sonora to southern Arizona.
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49
Nicolás Pineda Pablos: Hermosillo Has a Drinking Water Problem
Dr. Nicolás Pineda Pablos is a political scientist and researcher at the Colegio de Sonora, in Hermosillo, and one of Mexico’s foremost experts on urban water provision. Here, Dr. Pineda rings us up to speed on Hermosillo’s current water situation. Hermosillo, the state capital, is a Sonoran Desert city with close to one million people and faces profound climate-related challenges: a swiftly warming and drying environment, ongoing drought, and the threat of ever-more severe storms. Mexico’s north and northwest are currently experiencing some of the worst drought conditions in recorded history, with reservoir levels down by as much as 70 or 80% in some regions. Dr. Pineda is part of a diverse group of concerned citizens and experts called Hermosillo Cómo Vamos? – Hermosillo, How are We Doing? – working together to provide research-based solutions to this hairy problem. Dr. Pineda talks about all of this and much more, including the question of whether Hermosillo is facing a so-called Day Zero scenario, in which the city becomes unable to provide a basic reliable supply of potable water to its citizens.
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48
Alex La Pierre: Borderlandia, Citizen-Level Diplomacy
Our guest for this episode of JSW Radio is Alex La Pierre. Alex is co-founding director, with his wife Rocío La Pierre, of the binational, Southern Arizona-based non-profit organization, Borderlandia. Borderlandia’s mission is to expand public understanding of the U.S.-Mexico borderlands through a diversity of activities, including, especially, educational tours in southern Arizona and in Sonora, Mexico. I ask Alex about this work and about his view of public history more broadly. We also discuss how perceptions of the borderlands region seem to become more distorted the farther away one gets, and how Borderlandia’s work aims to combat this distorting effect of distance and politics. https://www.borderlandia.org/
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47
Enrique Olivares-Pelayo: Carceral Geographies
Politics and Prison Ink in Arizona: A Map for Navigation in a World of Post-structural Violence, by Enrique Alan Olivares-Pelayo was published in the Autumn 2023 edition of Journal of the Southwest. In this episode, the author of the piece discusses his work on embodied carceral geographies, how the punishment of the prison system manifests in and on the bodies it ensnares. And that's a lot of people. One in five prisoners in the world is incarcerated in the United States. Tens of thousands of those people are in Arizona. The state spends over a billion dollar of our general budget on the correctional system; it´s the third highest cost, eight percent. Enrique was confined in that system for almost five years. In his work, he situates prison, the constellation of institutions that create the penal complexes at every level of government, including those which retain people on behalf of national immigration and customs enforcement, as a landscape of structural violence. His piece on the Journal looks at the tattoos that many acquire during their time locked up as visible representations of their experiences. Music Credits: Nostalgia – Composed and performed by David Garrido Guil. Used with permission. Sol de Invierno II – Composed and performed by David Garrido Guil. Used with permission. Find more of his work at http://www.davidgarridoguil.com Help us improve the content of JSW Radio taking this brief survey: https://uarizona.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3fTagjmStzrz4EK
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46
Invasive Species of the Sonoran Desert (II)
This episode is a companion to our November 2024 piece about invasive plants and land management in the Sonoran Desert. It features three practitioners of Indigenous cultural and ecological preservation – Karl Hoerig who works for the Pascua Yaqui Tribe; Jacelle Ramon-Sauberan whose academic work captures Tohono O’odham history; and Raeshaun Ramon, who serves as a Saguaro National Park Ranger. JSW is grateful for their perspectives, and for the chance to broaden the land management conversation— in part by using the Saguaro cactus as a case study for key considerations about how humans exist within desert ecologies.
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45
Invasive Species of the Sonoran Desert (I)
The Sonoran Desert is renowned for its iconic, endemic species—and home to many people who are dedicated to studying and preserving them. Invasive species present a threat to desert ecologies that is growing along with globalized plant trade, climate change and resource depletion. Harmful, prolific plants displace native species and disrupt ecological processes like fire regimes and food production cycles. Today’s episode is part one of an expansive conversation about invasive species and how they relate to regional land management strategies in general. Patricia Schwartz talks with Kim Franklin, Associate Director for Conservation at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, and with Brian Powell, Division Manager in Pima County's Conservation Lands and Resources Department.
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44
Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Falcon Dam/Presa Falcón (En Español))
In episode 3 of the Flood Justice en las Fronteras podcast doctoral candidate Lucas Belury interviews Dr. Caroline Tracey, a geographer, journalist, and author of the forthcoming book Salt Lakes (W.W. Norton, 2026). In this episode we discuss the politics of the 1954 Falcon Dam (Presa Falcón) in the Rio Grande/Río Bravo river. This dam provided irrigation water and hydro-electricity to both Texas and Tamaulipas, yet flooded and displaced thousands of border residents.
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Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Falcon Dam/Presa Falcón (In English)
In episode 3 of the Flood Justice en las Fronteras podcast doctoral candidate Lucas Belury interviews Dr. Caroline Tracey, a geographer, journalist, and author of the forthcoming book Salt Lakes (W.W. Norton, 2026). In this episode we discuss the politics of the 1954 Falcon Dam (Presa Falcón) in the Rio Grande/Río Bravo river. This dam provided irrigation water and hydro-electricity to both Texas and Tamaulipas, yet flooded and displaced thousands of border residents.
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42
Aravaipa Canyon: A Rattlesnake Tale
This episode of JSW Radio features an interview with Scottsdale resident (and the host’s brother-in-law) Justin Driscoll, who tells the story of his rattlesnake bite experience in 2021. Driscoll and a friend were hiking in Aravaipa Canyon, east of Phoenix and north of Tucson. Aravaipa is one of the few spots in central and southern Arizona with a perennial stream, and, because of this, the wildlife there is abundant and diverse, including the Western Diamondback rattlesnake that would alter the course of Justin’s journey. Hosted and produced by Jeff Banister; edited by Carlos Quintero.
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41
Beverely Elliott: African American Museum of Southern Arizona
Beverely Elliott is the Executive Director of the African American Museum of Southern Arizona, the only museum of its kind in the state. In this episode she gives us a tour of the young museum's exhibitions, tracing Black history in the Sonoran Desert.
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40
Mapping Racist Housing Restrictions in Tucson
This series explores the historical foundations of the American Southwest and their effect on urban issues today, including the region's worsening housing crisis. Housing segregation was made illegal in 1968, but its effects remain visible in Southwest cities. A coalition of researchers, advocacy groups and community members recently completed the Mapping Racist Covenants (MRC) Project, which identified exclusionary language still present in the contracts of many Tucson neighborhoods. Though about a third of residents lived in an area with racist restrictions at the time of the study, this work helped spur state-level changes to make removing discriminatory language easier. This episode primarily features Dr. Jason Jurjevich, Director of the MRC Project and assistant professor at the School of Geography, Development and Environment at the University of Arizona. Dr. Jurjevich dives into the MRC project, as well as his other work evaluating plumbing poverty in the US and the use of Census data as a policymaking tool. Music by Ketsa: Innuendos
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39
Michelle Berry: Practicing History from Diverse Perspectives
Dr. Michelle Berry is a historian and professor with dual appointments in the History and Gender & Women's Studies Departments at the University of Arizona. She is involved with the Public History Collaborative and passionate about creating engaging and accessible pathways for everyone to experience history in the making. Patricia Schwartz speaks with Dr. Berry about her critical frameworks, history as a practice, and the importance of understanding how more-than-human actors shape our histories. This interview kicks off a series of episodes focusing on historical forces, policies and movements that have shaped Southern Arizona today.
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38
Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Rio Grande/Rio Bravo Delta (In English)
Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Rio Grande/Rio Bravo Delta (In English) by Southwest Center
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Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Rio Grande/Rio Bravo Delta (En Español)
Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Rio Grande/Rio Bravo Delta (En Español) by Southwest Center
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36
Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Ambos Nogales (En Español)
Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Ambos Nogales (En Español) by Southwest Center
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Flood Justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands: Ambos Nogales (In English)
Journal of the Southwest Radio is proud to present this series about flood justice in the US-Mexico Borderlands. Hosted by Lucas Belury, these bilingual episodes address the environmental, demographic, and political factors shaping the paradoxical issue of flooding in arid lands. The first episode, an interview with Dr. Adriana Zuniga-Terán, discusses green infrastructure, equitable policy and flood vulnerability in the border cities of ambos Nogales. Lucas Belury is a second-year Ph.D. student in the School of Geography, Development and Environment at the University of Arizona. His research challenges environmental racism by integrating remote sensing for flood detection with the lived experience of marginalized Latinx communities along the US-Mexico border. Utilizing the human-centered design concept of co-production, in which research and community members are equal contributors of knowledge production, he collaborates with community-based flood justice advocacy organizations in the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas and Northeastern Mexico. Through these partnerships, his research supports community-based organizations in their challenge against environmental racism and structural inequality.
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34
Honoring Corridos and Celestino Fernandez
The 2023 edition of Tucson Meet Yourself honored the Corrido and one of its most prominent researchers and writers, Dr. Celestino Fernandez. He was interviewed by Dr. Estevan Azcona, musicologist and associated research scientist at the Southwest Center, as local corridistas played some of his compositions. “Running tales” inspired by real events, Corridos amplify voices often muffled by dominant culture. A composer of over 50 corridos, Fernandez recently released Corridos de Celestino, a double album featuring corridos on immigration, the shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, and the massacre of 19 students and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, among other events.
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33
The Border Simulator, with Gabriel Dozal
Gabriel Dozal discusses his debut collection, The Border Simulator, where the U.S.-Mexico border is redefined as a place of invention; crossing it becomes a matter of simulation. The poems accompany Primitivo, who attempts to cross the border, an imaginary boundary that becomes more real and challenging as his journey progresses; and his sister, Primitiva, who lives an alternate, static life as an exploited migrant worker in la fabrica. He chats with Taylor about the experience of writing and living the borderlands, and shares the process of translating the work, completed by Natasha Tiniacos. Gabriel is a writer and educator from El Paso, Texas. He received his MFA in Creative Writing from The University of Arizona and he is a poetry editor for DIAGRAM. His work appears in Poetry Magazine, The Iowa Review, Guernica, The Brooklyn Rail, The Literary Review, The Volta, and elsewhere.
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32
Laurel Bellante: Southern Arizona's Food Situation
Dr. Bellante is a geographer whose research and teaching focus on food justice, food systems, and global environmental change. Bellante lived and worked in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas for six years before returning to the U.S. to pursue master’s and doctoral degrees in human-environmental geography. Her research centered on small-scale Chiapas corn farmers struggling with a changing climate and neoliberal economic policies. Dr. Bellante teaches several undergraduate courses, from an introduction to critical food studies to food justice, ethics and activism. She also co-leads the university’s Food Systems Research Lab with Dr. Gigi Owen, staff scientist with Climate Assessment for the Southwest.
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31
Tara Plath: Visualizing the Human Costs of Prevention through Deterrence
Tara Plath is a PhD student in the Film & Media Studies Department at UC Santa Barbara. She holds an MA in Research Architecture from Goldsmiths, University of London and a BFA in Sculpture and BA in Visual and Critical Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is an interdisciplinary practice-based researcher whose ongoing research uses mapping and open-source investigation techniques to challenge state violence, surveillance, and militarization at the US southwest border in Arizona. In a conversation following the end of Title 42, Tara and Taylor discuss the compounding crises of disappearance and death in the Sonoran Desert; border militarization and the weaponization of humanitarian aid as part of Border Patrol’s long-term strategy of Prevention Through Deterrence. Plath’s transdisciplinary research and activism helps us better visualize the devastating effects of the occupation of Indigenous land throughout the Sonoran Desert and beyond, while offering methods and platforms for transborder solidarity.
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30
Nicolas Pineda Pablos: Water and Politics in Sonora's Capital, Hermosillo
Dr. Nicolás Pineda Pablos is a researcher in El Colegio de Sonora, Hermosillo. He has a doctorate in public policy and community planning from the University of Texas at Austin and wrote his dissertation on Mexican urban water policy. Since that time, he has continued to focus on water issues across Mexico, from the northern border states to the Yucatán Peninsula. Pineda is indeed one of Mexico’s foremost experts on urban water, with numerous publications, several of which are the result of long-term collaborations with researchers at the University of Arizona. In this interview, Dr. Pineda reflects on the current state of water in Sonora’s capital, Hermosillo, a desert city that, much like Tucson, is faced with profound challenges, not least of which are a swiftly warming and drying environment, ongoing drought, and the threat of ever-more more powerful storms.
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29
Moses Thompson & Carly Pierson: Rooted in Community – UA School Garden Workshop
The School Garden Workshop (SGW) is an immensely impactful program in the University of Arizona and Tucson Unified School District communities… as well as throughout the city of Tucson and greater southern Arizona region. School gardens can be powerful educational tools. SGW enables teachers to tap into their students’ energy and curiosity through integrating active, hands-on lessons in conventional academic subjects, like math, science, and language arts. Equally important as conventional and practice-based learning spaces, school gardens foster cooperation, autonomy, and social justice. In this conversation, we hear more from Moses and Carly about SGW and some of the myriad ways the gardens affect the next generation of learners. Hosted by Taylor Miller; post-production and edition by Carlos Quintero
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Marcela Vásquez-León: The Problem with Protecting the Vaquita
Dr. Marcela Vásquez-León is the Director of the Center for Latin American Studies and Professor of Anthropology in the School of Anthropology, University of Arizona. She has conducted research and outreach for over two decades with smallholder agricultural and fishing communities throughout Latin America and the U.S. Southwest. Her focus includes collective organization, common property resources, and rural development. In this episode of the JSW Radio Podcast, we speak with Dr. Vásquez-León about the impact of efforts to protect the endangered vaquita marina on fishing communities in Mexico’s upper Gulf of California. Scientists and international non-profit organizations, working in tandem with the Mexican government, have invested significant intellectual, financial, and human resources in the upper gulf and on the vaquita. Vásquez-León argues, however, that their efforts have resulted in the near total collapse of what was once a robust fisheries economy and, thus far, have produced few demonstrable successes. Her analysis of the situation, based on years of work with local fishing communities, points to the disparities and injustices that so often result from conservation programs that focus on protecting a single species without considering the deeply entangled “natures” and “cultures” that such efforts both affect and produce. Ultimately, it is not an argument against protecting ecologies and environments but rather a push for a view and approach that considers relationships between human and non-human worlds.
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Tom Sheridan: Protecting the Sonoran Desert (II)
Dr. Tom Sheridan is a research cultural anthropologist in the Southwest Center and professor in the University of Arizona School of Anthropology. Sheridan has been a longtime student of ranching and ranch lands in southern Arizona, which led him, starting in the 1990s, to participate in the development of Pima County’s Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan, the SDCP, one of the most innovative and successful county-led conservation efforts in the United States. Tom is currently researching and writing a book on the SDCP, including on the larger land-use and conservation dynamics shaping the region starting in the late 20th century, a convergence of forces that led to the successful development and implementation of the Plan. This interview with Dr. Sheridan is the second installment of our two-part series focused on conservation in Southern Arizona. The first was with Brian Powell, who now serves as a Pima County Parks Superintendent with Pima County’s Natural Resource, Parks and Recreation department, and who for several years was pivotal to developing the county’s biological monitoring program.
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Brian Powell: Protecting the Sonoran Desert
Brian Powell, currently a Parks Superintendent with Pima County’s Natural Resource, Parks and Recreation department, has spent the past two decades working to understand and protect biodiversity in the Sonoran Desert of Southern Arizona. In 2007, he was tapped by Maeveen Behan to develop a biological monitoring program for Pima County. In this interview, Powell describes efforts leading to the county’s innovative approach to preserving open space, starting in the late 1990s – the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan. This was a time of fast-paced housing development, particularly on Tucson’s northwest side, and environmentalists were pushing for stronger controls on growth. This interview is the first in a two-part series focusing on conservation in Southern Arizona.
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Entre Yoris y Guarijíos III - En Español
Última entrega de una serie de tres lecturas bilingües extraídas del número de otoño de 2004 del Journal of the Southwest, un número especial que incluía la traducción del libro Entre Yoris y Guarijíos: Crónicas sobre el quehacer Antropológico, escrito por la doctora María Teresa Valdivia Dounce, investigadora y profesora del Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. A finales de los 70, Valdivia viajó con un equipo de médicos, agrónomos y trabajadores sociales del Instituto Nacional Indigenista para mejorar las condiciones de vida del pueblo Guarijío en la Sierra Madre Occidental. El libro es un registro auntobiográfico del trabajo de Valdivia apoyando a los Guarijíos en su lucha por la tierra contra los rancheros y agricultores no indígenas ("Yoris"), y es a la vez una meditada reflexión sobre el trabajo de campo en la antropología. La versión en español es leída por la Doctora Jéssica Retis, profesora de periodismo en la Universidad de Arizona.
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Entre Yoris y Guarijíos III - English Version
Last episode of a three-part bilingual excerpt taken from the autumn 2014 issue of Journal of the Southwest, a special issue featuring a translation of the book, Entre Yoris y Guarijíos: Crónicas sobre El Quehacer Antropológico, written by Dr. María Teresa Valdivia Dounce. Dr. Valdivia is a researcher and professor in the Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. In the late 1970s, Valdivia traveled with a team of medical doctors, agronomists, and social workers, all in the employ of Mexico’s Instituto Nacional Indigenista, to improve the living conditions of the Guarijío Indigenous people of the Sierra Madre Occidental. Valdivia’s book is both an autobiographical account of her efforts to help the Guarijíos in their land struggle with non-Indigenous ranchers and farmers (“Yoris”), and a thoughtful reflection on fieldwork in anthropology. Reading the Spanish-language version is Dr. Jéssica Retis, a professor of journalism at the University of Arizona.
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23
Maribel Álvarez: Public Folklorist, Scholar, and Advocate for Regional Traditions and Arts
Dr. Maribel Álvarez is the Jim Griffith Chair in Public Folklore in the University of Arizona Southwest Center, Associate Dean of Community Engagement in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, and an Associate Research Professor in the School of Anthropology. She founded the Southwest Folklife Alliance, a non-profit organization that supports folklife throughout the U.S. Southwest and Northern Mexico and directs one of the largest folklife festivals in the United States, Tucson Meet Yourself. As a public folklorist and a professor, Dr. Álvarez straddles a line between the life of a scholar and that of a community leader and advocate for regional folk traditions. In 2018, she was honored by the American Folklore Society with the highly prestigious Américo Paredes Prize. Music: Lágrimas Negras. Bebo Valdés y Chucho Valdés. "Juntos para Siempre", Universal Music Spain, 2008.
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Sallie Marston: Researching and Teaching Geography from the Classroom to the Garden
Dr. Sallie Marston is professor emeritus in the School of Geography, Development, and Environment at the University of Arizona, where she held the distinguished title of regents professor before retiring in May of 2021. Marston is the author of numerous influential publications in political and human geography and has mentored more than 50 graduate students. Her research and writing on the politics of scale have shaped how we understand this pivotal concept in the discipline of geography, and in the social sciences more broadly. Marston’s many creative research collaborations with other scholars, as well as with students, writers, and activists, give her research a rare combination of breadth and depth. She is a scholar’s scholar, an innovative pedagogue, and a lovely human being.
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Entre Yoris y Guarijíos II - En Español
Ésta es la segunda entrega de una serie de tres lecturas bilingües extraídas del número de otoño de 2004 del Journal of the Southwest, un número especial que incluía la traducción del libro Entre Yoris y Guarijíos: Crónicas sobre el quehacer Antropológico, escrito por la doctora María Teresa Valdivia Dounce, investigadora y profesora del Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. A finales de los 70, Valdivia viajó con un equipo de médicos, agrónomos y trabajadores sociales del Instituto Nacional Indigenista para mejorar las condiciones de vida del pueblo Guarijío en la Sierra Madre Occidental. El libro es un registro auntobiográfico del trabajo de Valdivia apoyando a los Guarijíos en su lucha por la tierra contra los rancheros y agricultores no indígenas ("Yoris"), y es a la vez una meditada reflexión sobre el trabajo de campo en la antropología. La versión en español es leída por la Doctora Jéssica Retis, profesora de periodismo en la Universidad de Arizona.
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20
Entre Yoris y Guarijíos II - English Version
This is the second of a three-part bilingual excerpt taken from the autumn 2014 issue of Journal of the Southwest, a special issue featuring a translation of the book, Entre Yoris y Guarijíos: Crónicas sobre El Quehacer Antropológico, written by Dr. María Teresa Valdivia Dounce. Dr. Valdivia is a researcher and professor in the Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. In the late 1970s, Valdivia traveled with a team of medical doctors, agronomists, and social workers, all in the employ of Mexico’s Instituto Nacional Indigenista, to improve the living conditions of the Guarijío Indigenous people of the Sierra Madre Occidental. Valdivia’s book is both an autobiographical account of her efforts to help the Guarijíos in their land struggle with non-Indigenous ranchers and farmers (“Yoris”), and a thoughtful reflection on fieldwork in anthropology. Reading the Spanish-language version is Dr. Jéssica Retis, a professor of journalism at the University of Arizona.
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19
Entre Yoris y Guarijíos - English Version
With this third installment of the JSW Radio Archive we begin a three-part bilingual reading taken from the autumn 2014 issue of Journal of the Southwest, a special issue featuring a translation of the book, Entre Yoris y Guarijíos: Crónicas sobre El Quehacer Antropológico, written by Dr. María Teresa Valdivia Dounce. Dr. Valdivia is a researcher and professor in the Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. In the late 1970s, Valdivia traveled with a team of medical doctors, agronomists and social workers, all in the employ of Mexico’s Instituto Nacional Indigenista, to improve the living conditions of the Guarijío Indigenous people of the Sierra Madre Occidental. Valdivia’s book is both an autobiographical account of her efforts to help the Guarijíos in their land struggle with non-Indigenous ranchers and farmers (“Yoris”), and a thoughtful reflection on fieldwork in anthropology. Reading the Spanish-language version is Dr. Jéssica Retis, a professor of journalism at the University of Arizona.
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18
Entre Yoris y Guarijíos - En Español
Con esta tercera entrega del JSW Radio Archive iniciamos una serie de tres lecturas bilingües extraídas del número de otoño de 2004 del Journal of the Southwest, un número especial que incluía la traducción del libro Entre Yoris y Guarijíos: Crónicas sobre el quehacer Antropológico, escrito por la doctora María Teresa Valdivia Dounce, investigadora y profesora del Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. A finales de los 70, Valdivia viajó con un equipo de médicos, agrónomos y trabajadores sociales del Instituto Nacional Indigenista para mejorar las condiciones de vida del pueblo Guarijío en la Sierra Madre Occidental. El libro es un registro auntobiográfico del trabajo de Valdivia apoyando a los Guarijíos en su lucha por la tierra contra los rancheros y agricultores no indígenas ("Yoris"), y es a la vez una meditada reflexión sobre el trabajo de campo en la antropología. La versión en español es leída por la Doctora Jéssica Retis, profesora de periodismo en la Universidad de Arizona.
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17
Ancestral Geographies: The Indian School
This episode is part of a series exploring the ancestral geographies of what we refer to as the Southwest. Through interviews with Dr. Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert and Rosalie and Patty Talahongva, host Patricia Schwartz had the opportunity to re-learn critical aspects of history and hear from inspiring folks exploring decolonial futures through the telling of Indigenous stories.
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16
Travels in the Interior of Mexico
This second installment of JSW Radio Archive contains a brief excerpt from British lieutenant W. H. Hardy's epic travelog "Travels in the Interior of Mexico, 1825, 1926, 1827 & 1828." Harvey was both a keen observer and awfully misinformed, producing important descriptions and maps, but making many errors due to his poor grasp of the Spanish language and the cultural superiority believes and racism of the times. The narration takes us to the port of Guaymas in July 1826, after Hardy's long, tortuous trip across Sonora and the Yaqui territories.
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JSW Radio Archive - Dancing for Water
Dancing for Water is written by Stanley Crawford, and originally appeared in the autumn 1990 special issue of JSW, partly focused on water rights in northern New Mexico. With this audio essay we are launching a new experiment that we're calling the JSW GSW Radio Archive. For each episode of the archive we will read short essays or excerpts of essays that have appeared in the JSW. We'll also be reading occasionally from other materials that while not originally from Journal we nonetheless think are important for understanding the historical geography of the Southwest and border lands region including northern Mexico
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Unlawful Entry: Toxic Trespass in American Soils
The third installment of our ongoing series about water in the American West, written and produced by Patricia Schwartz, looks at a largely obscured but incredibly pervasive threat to both our natural resources and our general wellbeing. One that the COVID-19 pandemic has brought even further into focus. Toxic trespass is the non-consensual infiltration of our homes, bodies and bloodstreams by harmful substances and chemicals. Its consequences are experienced disproportionately across the socio-economic and geographic spectrums, but its legacy affects us all to an increasing degree. Schwartz talks with Dr. Monica Ramirez Andreotta of the University of Arizona about her work in communities near the Environmental Protection Agency’s Superfund clean-up sites, exploring the history, and failures, of the systems we rely on to protect us from exposure. Music by Algar the Bard: System of Down's Toxicity, Medieval Style.
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13
Natalia Mendoza-Rockwell
Jeff Banister talks with Dr. Natalia Mendoza-Rockwell about her work documenting the effects of drugs and human smuggling in the communities across the US-Mexico borderlands. A Sonoran native from the town of Altar, Dr. Mendoza-Rockwell is a professor of anthropology at Fordham University, and one of the few scholars analyzing the politics and social geography of smuggling from an ethnographic perspective. Natalia is also a gifted writer with a powerful prose, recently recognized by the prestigious Jose Revueltas literary prize.
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12
Reimagining Rivers, with Patricia Schwartz
Rivers have long been the lifeblood of human civilizations. But taken for granted, many of them are bleeding out. Restoration is still possible… but is it a priority? With unexpected optimism, our guests make the compelling case that it should be. Written, produced, and narrated by Patricia Schwartz, a graduate student in the School of Geography, Development and Environment, University of Arizona. This episode features interviews with stream ecologist Mark Briggs and cultural anthropologist Joaquin Murrieta-Saldivar. Between the two of them, they’ve worked on restoring every river in the western borderlands… including the up-and-coming Santa Cruz. We hope they might inspire you to learn more about restoration at home and on a city-wide scale, as they have inspired host Patricia Schwartz (a cynical grad student who spends much of her time wallowing in water policy woes).
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11
Better Monsooner Than Later, with Patricia Schwartz
Depending on where you're standing, summer rains in the desert can mean rejuvenation or destruction (or both). Rapid urbanization has put borderlands cities out of touch with the storm waters that sustain them, an oversight for which they pay dearly in flood damages and eroded soils. What predictions can we make about the future of the monsoon in the Sonoran Desert? What are we doing to make use of the rain and prevent it from sweeping us away? How can storm water management be used to promote environmental justice and urban equity? Written, produced, and narrated by Patricia Schwartz, a graduate student in the School of Geography, Development and Environment, University of Arizona. Featuring interviews with Dr. Gregg Garfin, University Director of the Southwest Climate Adaptation Science Center and Associate Professor/Extension Specialist at the School of Natural Resources and the Environment at the University of Arizona; and Dr. Adriana Zuniga-Teran, Assistant Research Scientist and Professor at the School of Landscape Architecture and Planning and the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy at the University of Arizona. Our apologies for any blemishes in audio quality –interviews were recorded online during the Covid-19 era (i.e. from Patricia’s basement).
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10
Luis Coronado-Guel, bridging US-Mexico academic gaps, Part 2
In the second part of the conversation, Dr. Coronado reflects on and contextualizes the current crisis triggered by the COVID pandemic, commenting on the lack of referents in the last generations and the ascent of populism in America, from South to North.
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9
Luis Coronado-Guel, bridging US-Mexico academic gaps, Part 1
Dr. Coronado is the Director of SBS Mexico Initiatives in the University of Arizona. A law and history scholar, he has studied the cultural and intellectual history of XIX and XX century Mexico, largely through the lens of celebrations and public rituals. Luis has published articles, books and book chapters on Mexican law, history, historiography, and legal philosophy. In his most recent work, he explores popular culture and cultural heritage shared between Mexico and the United States
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8
Laiken Jordahl’s fight for the borderlands, Part 2
Laiken Jordahl details in this second part of the interview how the pandemic is being used to accelerate work in the construction of the wall and the most immediate damage it is causing to specific areas and fauna of the borderlands, apart from the health threats posed by COVID-19. nowall.org, @LaikenJordahl, facebook.com/laiken.jordahl
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7
Laiken Jordahl’s fight for the borderlands, Part 1
Laiken Jordahl, borderlands campaigner for the Center for Biological Diversity, discusses his work protecting wildlife, ecosystems and communities along the US-Mexico borderlands. Laiken shares his experiences at the National Parks Service and his struggle to alert about the damage caused by the wall and the militarization of the border.
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6
Morning coffee with Raquel Rubio-Goldsmith, Part 2
Second part of our morning coffee with Dr. Rubio, reviewing six decades of research, community activism, and the very history of Mexico and the US. Raquel shares her rich anecdotes from her academic and militant experiences, and her invaluable insights on the present of migrations flows across the Southwest.
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5
Morning coffee with Raquel Rubio-Goldsmith, Part 1
Dr. Rubio-Goldsmith is the co-director of the Binational Migration Institute in the University of Arizona's Department of Mexican-American Studies. A professor of History at Pima College for three decades, she has participated since the late sixties on a diversity of human rights initiatives in Tucson and the greater Southwest, and has led numerous community-based research projects focused on the effects of US immigration and border enforcement policies.
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