
Jill Replogle
Fronteras ReporterJill Replogle is a Fronteras reporter in San Diego. She has been a journalist for more than 10 years, reporting from Central America, Mexico, and California. She has produced radio and video features for PRI's The World, KALW (San Francisco), Current TV, and the Video Journalism Movement. Her print stories have been published in The Miami Herald, Time.com, The Christian Science Monitor and the San Francisco Chronicle, as well as in Guatemalan newspapers SigloXXI, ElPeriodico and Inforpress Centroamericana. Jill has a bachelor's degree in geography from the University of Colorado Boulder and a master's degree in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley. She's covered everything from local and international politics, to crime and drug violence, to environmental and public health issues. When she's not on the job, you might find her biking, scrambling up a rock somewhere, or otherwise exploring the outdoors.
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Alejandro Santiago was a Oaxacan artist who built an army of clay migrants to represent friends and family who abandoned his town to migrate to the U.S.
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Tijuana became the first city in Latin America to switch completely from analog to digital television. The city is a test case for the rest of Mexico.
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Since 1914, millions of visitors to Tijuana have posed with zebra-striped donkeys along the city’s main tourist strip. Preservationists want the tradition declared cultural patrimony.
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Mexico’s conservative PAN party held on to the governor’s seat in Baja California with the election of Francisco Vega De Lamadrid.
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Mexico’s Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, dominated elections in most of the 15 states where citizens went to the polls on Sunday. The closely-watched Baja governor's race won't be called until later this week.
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In August, Mexico plans to add five northbound lanes to funnel passenger cars to the inspection booths at the San Ysidro border.
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