This is one of the things that I appreciate most about her work. She evaluates the Border Patrol at various scales, and her inclusion of local concerns was groundbreaking in terms of the historiography of the BP. How and why was understanding the local nature of the BP crucial for her ability to make her arguments? Do you think that she sacrificed the national and international in favor of the local, or did she strike a good balance between those scales of analysis?

Brandon Morgan
Brandon Morgan

Written by Brandon Morgan

Associate Dean, History Instructor, & researcher of the Borderlands, U.S. West, & Modern Mexico. I just published a book about violence and the rural border.

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