Abstract
After electing a new president in 2018, Mexico implemented a series of new migrant policies that changed the way it handles both the inflow of Central Americans across its southern border and those seeking to enter the United States across its northern border (including migrants who entered the US and have been returned). Mexico increased enforcement of its immigration laws following demands and threats made by the Trump administration, but the policy has proved popular domestically, and is unlikely to change even as a new US president takes office seeking to reverse many of Trump’s policies.
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