Celaya, Gto., November 16, 2016.- At Campus Celaya-Salvatierra was held the International Colloquium "Human mobility, Territory and Migratory Policies: the multiple impacts of the migratory development of Barack Obama in Mexico and its frontiers", where they addressed the migratory topic and its different perspectives, the social, economic effects and the human rights of who features this phenomenon.
The activity was organized by Dr. Ana Vila Freyre, professor of the Division of Social and Administrative Sciences, with the support of the State Institute of the Migrant of Guanajuato and their Families and from the Department of Innovation, Sciences and Higher Education through the Program of Support to Young Researchers 2016.
Along six worktables and a master conference, the experts of international universities, representatives of institute, research centers and interested foundations in topics of migration explained how the crisis in United States forced more than two and a half million people to refuge in Mexico and as young who were born in our country are "returned", creating mixed families and finding themselves as foreigners in their own land.
Likewise, they spoke on how Mexico turns into an "attractor" of Central American population, of 200,000 people who go through the country searching the "American dream", 40% stays to live and the reasons remain unknown, as well as where they locate and under which conditions.
For the researchers, migration has a before and after, for what they spoke of redefining the concept at least for Mexico, due to the complexity of double nationality and illegal Mexicans in both borders.
Likewise, the researchers agreed that the political circumstances relate to other focuses as humanitarian crisis, since the blockages force the entry by the desert, situation that leads a human risk and numerous problems in matter of human rights.
For Dr. Vila Freyre was an enriching experience, since the attending students could recognize the problematic and would like to link the migratory problem with related degrees to create business projects in vulnerable communities and work in strategies for the development of communities with high margination index.