Restrictions

Materials located in boxes 21-33, 50-53, 56 and box 57; folder 9 are restricted until the year 2079 according to federal and state laws.

Abstract

The American Friends Service Committee - US/Mexico Border Program (USMBP) is a human rights advocacy organization that was established to support immigrant rights and concerns by documenting human and civil rights abuses by law enforcement agencies in and around communities on the San Diego County-Mexico border. The records mostly encompass the organizational and administrative activities directed by Roberto Martinez, director from 1982-2003. The collection contains incoming and outgoing correspondence, field reports and studies, and meeting minutes, with similar materials in records for the parallel project, the Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project (ILEMP). The main components of the records are abuse complaint case files and legal case documents compiled from individuals by the USMBP, the Centro de Asuntos Migratorios (CAM), the Chicano Federation of San Diego County, and the Coalition for Law and Justice. Additionally, the papers contain conference and seminar materials, subject files, brochures, published writings, and other materials supporting projects and organizations involved with AFSC and Roberto Martinez.

Administrative History

Since 1940, the American Friends Service Committee - San Diego (AFSC-SD) has worked closely with migrant workers and promoted rural and urban development in Mexico. Focusing on improving the living and working conditions of migrant workers and strengthening their political voice, the AFSC-SD has historically played a principal role in Mexicano activism in the US-Mexcio border region of California.

Orginally the AFSC-SD began the U.S.-Mexico Border Project (USMBP) in 1977 to address economic imbalances between the US and Mexico. With the passage of the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, the program began to monitor and document human and civil rights abuses by border law enforcement agencies. The program represented two subcommittees, one in Pasadena and, other in San Diego. The USMBP remains a unique project which records incidents of state violence that might otherwise remain underreported and/or uninvestigated.

Marco Antonio Rodriguez became the first director in 1978-1979 under the coordination of the AFSC Pasadena office under Frank Galvan. Roberto Martinez was hired as director in 1982, and served as such until 2000. Martinez was already working as a human rights advocate through the Catholic Diocese and as a member of the Chicano Federation of San Diego County, as director of Coalition for a Humane Immigration Policy, and through the formation of the East County Sheriff/Community Relations Task Force.

During 1983-1986, Martinez worked with Centro de Asuntos Migratorios (CAM), an independent legal services organization formed in 1978 that worked closely with AFSC until 1993 when CAM merged with USMBP. Marco Antonio Rodriguez became CAM's interim director after the resignation of Leonor Lozano in 1983, until 1989 when Richard Garcia, the El Centro office attorney and supervisor became executive director. CAM's mission was to provide and promote vital legal representation, education, and advocacy of undocumented individuals and their families.

In 1987, the USMBP undertook a special Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project (ILEMP) designed to focus on the human rights of those immigrating to the US from Mexico and on the quality of society's response to their security and respect. In 1997, AFSC-SD conducted a bi-national study of abuses in collaboration with human right organizations in Tijuana; in 2001, AFSC-SD staff initiated an ecumenical migrant outreach project.

Scope and Content

The records of the American Friends Service Committee - US/Mexico Border Program document the organization's accomplishments between 1982-2003 when Roberto Martinez was program director. USMBP was established to monitor local law enforcement practices, support immigrant labor rights, promote understanding of immigration problems, and to support strategic ligitation that would have an impact on immigration policies. The papers include administrative files for the Southern California regional office, in the form of correspondence, meeting minutes, public relations materials and summary reports, as well as for the related program, the Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project (ILEMP). Additionally, there are abuse complaint case files, 1977-2000, from citizen and non-citizen individuals in and around the San Diego-Mexico border region and documents illustrating the early volunteer work by Roberto Martinez at the Chicano Federation of San Diego County, the Coalition for Law and Justice, and the Centro de Asuntos Migratorios (CAM) records from 1981 to the merger with the US-Mexico Border Program in 1994.

The records are arranged in thirteen series: 1) CORRESPONDENCE, 2) ADMINISTRATIVE, 3) WRITINGS AND REPORTS, 4) LEGAL CASES, 5) ABUSE AND COMPLAINT CASES, 6) CONFERENCES AND SEMINARS, 7) ILEMP (IMMIGRATION LAW ENFORCEMENT MONITORING PROJECT), 8) WRITINGS OF OTHERS, 9) SUBJECT FILES, 10) CENTRO DE ASUNTO MIGRATORIOS (CAM), 11) CHICANO FEDERATION OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, 12) COALITION FOR LAW AND JUSTICE, and 13) RELATED ORGANIZATIONS.

SERIES 1: CORRESPONDENCE

The CORRESPONDENCE series is organized into two subseries A) Outgoing and B) Incoming both arranged chronologically, dated 1980-2003. The outgoing correspondence is AFSC (both national and regional) generated, generally administrative in nature, while the incoming correspondence is from various organizations and individuals concerning topics of immigration and law enforcement abuse.

SERIES 2: ADMINISTRATIVE

Although the US-Mexico Border Program is an independent regional project, the program follows the initiatives of the national orgranization in Philadelphia. Currently, the USMBP is supervised under the Pacific Southwest region program. The administrative series contains meeting minutes of both local and national committees, public relations and grant materials, newsletters, and various internally created documents such as articles of incorporation, organizational structure and history, and handwritten notes by staff. The series contains five subseries.

A) The Meeting Minutes subseries, arranged alphabetically by committee name, contains meeting minutes for the advisory board, national community relations, Pacific Southwest Regional office, Southern California area program, and sub-committees.

B) The Public Relations materials for AFSC includes informative brochures, AFSC event sponsored flyers, news articles mentioning AFSC and quoting Roberto Martinez, and press releases.

C) The Grant Materials subseries contains proposals, reports, and request applications for such organizations as the Ford Foundation and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation for grants the USMBP has applied for. They are arranged alphabetically by organization.

D) Arranged alphabetically, the General Administrative files represent organizational materials such as articles of incorporation, organizational structure, and history documents for the US-Mexico Border Program, certificates of appreciation, handwritten notes, and building plans for the proposed San Diego Friends Meeting House. Also included is a biographical profile and interview with Robert Martinez.

E) The Newsletters include AFSC national and regional publications including "News of Women's Liberation Worldwide" and SPOTLIGHT.

SERIES 3: WRITINGS AND REPORTS

The WRITINGS AND REPORTS series constitutes reports and position papers authored by AFSC staff compiled from data and analysis of abuse complaint files and national immigration studies.

SERIES 4: LEGAL CASES

The legal cases collected in this series comprise litigation documents used by the regional office for legal resource or which represent cases where AFSC was counsel or provided consultation.

SERIES 5: ABUSE AND COMPLAINT CASE FILES

The files, 1981-2003, record incidents of human rights abuse at the border and within the larger community, along with attempts to bring abuse and other concerns to the federal and state investigative level. The files are arranged by date, then alphabetically, but are restricted by federal and state laws due to their confidential nature.

SERIES 6: CONFERENCES AND SEMINARS

Arranged by title, the CONFERENCES AND SEMINARS series contains materials concerning conferences both attended and organized by AFSC representatives. The majority of documents support Roberto Martinez's role as a speaker or panelist.

SERIES 7: IMMIGRATION LAW ENFORCEMENT MONITORING PROJECT (ILEMP)

The IMMIGRATION LAW ENFORCEMENT MONITORING PROJECT was established to develop an organizational, informational, and educational network to analyze policy alternatives to immigration law enforcement abuse and its solution. The papers reflect the directorship of Maria Jimenez, 1987-2001, and document the collaborative work between AFSC-USMBP and ILEMP. Materials consist of correspondence and summaries of abuse and human rights violations; they're arranged alphabetically with the organizational materials followed by field reports summaries.

SERIES 8: WRITINGS OF OTHERS

This series includes published and unpublished writings on issues of concern to Roberto Martinez and AFSC. The writings represent reports, analyses, and recommendations on topics of immigrants' rights, regional sociological studies, and recommendations on state and federal immigration policies.

SERIES 9: SUBJECT FILES

The SUBJECT FILES series, arranged alphabetically, includes source materials collected on community and congressional issues and other regional projects.

SERIES 10: CENTRO DE ASUNTOS MIGRATORIOS (CAM)

CENTRO DE ASUNTOS MIGRATORIOS (Center for Migrant Affairs) was founded in 1978 as an ecumenically sponsored immigration services program providing complete and accurate legal representation, healthcare referrals, and other support services; offices were in San Diego, El Centro, and Chula Vista. CAM worked closely with AFSC-USMBP promoting education of immigration and border issues, and supported progressive change in the economic and social conditions along the border. Beginning in 1993, CAM merged programs with AFSC-USMBP. The series contains eleven subseries A through K.

A) The Correspondence subseries, arranged by date, represents outgoing and incoming letters, either generated by CAM representatives or of concern to the organization.

B) The Meeting Minutes are mainly representative of board of directors', advisory board, and staff meetings, 1981-1995.

C) The Reports subseries contains summaries of intake clients and cases from the Chula Vista and El Centro offices. The director's reports review organizational policies and decisions on a monthly basis during 1988-1993 and is arranged alphabetically.

D) The Public Relations subseries contains press releases and informational brochures.

E) CAM was funded by religious and non-profit organizations, including Presbyterian World Service Program, James Irvine Foundation, and the Rosenberg Foundation. The Grant Materials reflect requests, proposals, and funding reports and are arranged alphabetically by grant funder.

F) Arranged by title, the Conferences and Seminars subseries contains general correspondence and agenda information.

G) This subseries contains general Administrative Documents including articles of incorporation, bylaws, office memorandums, procedure manual, and notes related to CAM's organizational structure.

H) The Other Projects CAM supported ranged from the Proyecto San Juan subcontract to the Salvadoran Emergency Legal Assistance Project with materials reflecting progress reports and correspondence.

I) The Legal Cases are documents supporting immigration ligitation trials for clients of CAM legal representatives. Also included are weekly and monthly reports of legal activities where legal counsel was provided by CAM lawyers. In cases where confidential client information exists, the folders are restricted. The subseries is arranged alphabetically by client name with confidential documents separated at the end.

J) The Intake Sheets are forms used by CAM representatives to determine and record complaints by clients and the priorities for follow through claims. The documents are arranged chronologically by date and are restricted.

K) Simarily, the Receipt Books are client information log summaries and payment acknowledgement records, arranged chronologically by date and restricted.

SERIES 11: CHICANO FEDERATION OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY

Roberto Martinez was a community services volunteer for the Chicano Federation of San Diego County during the early 1980s. The Chicano Federation was established in 1968 to advocate for Latino recognition and promote civil and human rights. Martinez represented the organization as a committee member for the Law and Justice committee and the East County Sheriff's Task Force investigating police complaints on behalf of Chicano clients. The papers document Martinez's collaborative work with the Chicano Federation during the 1980s. The series is arranged into five subseries, A through E.

A) The Correspondence subseries represents outgoing and incoming letters, arranged chronologically between 1979-1986.

B) Arranged alphabetically by title, the Conferences and Seminars materials certifies the organization of several conferences coordinated by the Chicano Federation, mainly the Latino Summit 2000, which sought to develop community and political strategies with the Latino community.

C) The files for the general Administrative subseries include organizational reports from committees and meetings, publicity materials, community issue related source materials, and staff meeting agendas.

D) The Legal Documents in this subseries are cases in which the Chicano Federation was directly involved, including the Eden Gardens harassment lawsuit in 1974, and the Lopez case of 1974.

E) The Abuse and Complaint case files, arranged alphabetically, document citizen complaints taken by Chicano Federation staff, mainly involving local law enforcement. They contain confidential information and are restriced.

SERIES 12: COALITION FOR LAW AND JUSTICE

The COALITION FOR LAW AND JUSTICE was formed to respond to and organize the community against violations of human and civil rights by providing legal services and advocating education against institutionalized racism. The documents are arranged alphabetically by material type such as correspondence, meeting minutes, and press releases; the abuse complaint case files, 1985-1991, are restricted.

SERIES 13: RELATED ORGANIZATIONS

Roberto Martinez was involved with and chaired several local and national organizations including the American Civil Liberties Union-San Diego and Imperial County, Human Rights Watch, and the Coalition for Humane Immigration Rights of Los Angeles. These materials consist of meeting minutes, correspondence, and informational brochures.

CORRESPONDENCE

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1 1 1982-1984.
1 2 January-May, 1985.
1 3 June-December, 1985.
1 4 January-February, 1986.
1 5 March-December, 1986.
1 6 1987.
1 7 1988-1989.
2 1 1990.
2 2 1991.
2 3 1992.
2 4 1993.
2 5 January-June, 1994.
2 6 July-December, 1994.
2 7 January-March, 1995.
3 1 April, 1995.
3 2 May-December, 1995.
3 3 February-June, 1996.
3 4 July-December, 1996.
3 5 January-April, 1997.
3 6 May-December, 1997.
3 7 1998.
3 8 1999.
4 1 February-June, 2000.
4 2 July-December, 2000.
4 3 2001-2003.
4 4 Undated.
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4 5 1980-1983.
4 6 1984.
4 7 1985.
4 8 1986.
4 9 1987.
4 10 1988.
4 11 January-June, 1989.
5 1 July-October, 1989.
5 2 November 1989- May 1990.
5 3 July-September, 1990.
5 4 October-December, 1990.
5 5 January-February, 1991.
5 6 March 4-March 7, 1991.
5 7 March 13-March 18, 1991.
5 8 March 20-March 29, 1991.
5 9 April, 1991.
5 10 May-June, 1991.
5 11 July, 1991.
5 12 August 1-August 14, 1991.
6 1 August 15-August 30, 1991.
6 2 September, 1991.
6 3 October, 1991.
6 4 November 1-November 11, 1991.
6 5 November 13-December, 1991.
6 6 January, 1992.
6 7 February, 1992.
6 8 March, 1992.
6 9 April-May, 1992.
6 10 June, 1992.
6 11 July,1992.
6 12 August, 1992.
6 13 September, 1992.
6 14 October-December, 1992.
6 15 January-February, 1993.
7 1 March, 1993.
7 2 April, 1993.
7 3 July, 1993.
7 4 May, 1993.
7 5 June, 1993.
7 6 August,1993.
7 7 September-October, 1993.
7 8 November-December, 1993.
7 9 January-February, 1994.
7 10 March-April, 1994.
7 11 May, 1994.
7 12 June,1994.
7 13 July, 1994.
7 14 August, 1994.
7 15 September, 1994.
7 16 October, 1994.
8 1 November-December, 1994.
8 2 January-February, 1995.
8 3 March 1-March 8, 1995.
8 4 March 14-March 28, 1995.
8 5 April-May, 1995.
8 6 June-September, 1995.
8 7 October-December, 1995.
8 8 January-February, 1996.
8 9 March-July, 1996.
8 10 August-September, 1996.
8 11 October, 1996.
8 12 November, December, 1996.
8 13 January-February, 1997.
8 14 March, 1997.
8 15 April, 1997.
8 16 May, 1997.
8 17 June, 1997.
9 1 July, 1997.
9 2 August-September, 1997.
9 3 October-December, 1997.
9 4 January-February, 1998.
9 5 March, 1998.
9 6 April, 1998.
9 7 June-July, 1998.
9 8 August-November, 1998.
9 9 1999.
9 10 January-June, 2000.
9 11 July, 2000.
9 12 August, 2000.
9 13 September, 2000.
9 14 October, 2000.
9 15 November, 2000.
9 16 December, 2000.
9 17 January, 2001.
9 18 February, 2001.
9 19 March, 2001.
10 1 May-July, 2001.
10 2 August-December, 2001.
10 3 2002-2003.
10 4 Undated. Part 1.
10 5 Undated. Part 2.
10 6 Undated. Part 3.

ADMINISTRATIVE

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Meeting minutes

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10 7 Advisory Board- Meeting minutes, 1986 - 1996. Roberto Martinez, board chairman.
10 8 National Community Relations Committee- Meeting minutes, 1984 - 1986.
10 9 National Community Relations Committee- Meeting minutes, 1990 - 1998.
10 10 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, 1984 - 1986.
11 1 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, 1987 - 1989.
11 2 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, 1990.
11 3 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, February-June, 1991.
11 4 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, July-December, 1991.
11 5 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, 1992 - 1994.
11 6 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, 1995.
12 1 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Executive Committee- Meeting minutes, 1996 - 2000.
12 2 Pacific Southwest Regional Office- Staff meeting minutes, 1988 - 2001.
12 3 Southern California Area Program Committee- Meeting minutes, 1985 - 2003.
12 4 Sub-Committee meeting minutes, 1993 - 1999.
12 5 Sub-Committee meeting minutes, 2000 - 2001.

Public relations materials

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12 6 Brochures. Includes Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project (ILEMP) and other affiliate organizations.
12 7 Event flyers.
12 8 Logo labels.
12 9 News articles, 1980 - 1991.
12 10 News articles, 1992 - 1999.
12 11 News articles, 2000 - 2001.
13 1 Posters- General.
13 2 Press releases, 1983 - 1989.
13 3 Press releases, 1990 - 1993.
13 4 Press releases, 1994 - 2001.
13 5 Press releases - Undated.

Grant materials

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13 6 Angelica Foundation, 1994 - 1995. Includes correspondence.
13 7 California Consumer Protection Foundation- Proposal, 1994.
13 8 Ford Foundation- Proposal for archival computer system and library, 1990.
13 9 Ford Foundation, 1996. Proposal submitted for fiscal year 1996-1998, Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project.
13 10 James Irvine Foundation, November 11, 1994. The Citizenship Outreach and Immigration Services Coordination Program grant request.
13 11 Homeland Foundation, 1994. Includes annual report.
13 12 Liberty Hill Foundation, 1992 - 1993.
13 13 San Diego Community Foundation- Seasonal Agricultural Worker Project- Draft proposal.
13 14 San Diego Foundation- Work and Health Grants Program, 2001. Includes proposal for "Ecumenical Migrant Outreach Project (EMOP)".
13 15 San Diego Foundation for Change, 1994 - 2001. Includes proposals and correspondence.
13 16 W.K. Kellogg Foundation, 1994. Includes proposal and correspondence.

General miscellaneous

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13 17 Adopt-a-cross campaign.
13 18 Articles of Incorporation, 1992.
13 19 Biographical profile- Roberto Martinez.
13 20 Certifications of Appreciation.
13 21 Handwritten notes, 1982 - 2001. Constitutes meeting and draft notes written by Roberto Martinez and other staff.
14 1 Handwritten notes, Undated. Constitutes meeting and draft notes written by Roberto Martinez and other staff.
14 2 Interview with Roberto Martinez at the border with Greg Akili, April 25, 1992.
14 3 Pacific Southwest Region- Structure and history.
14 4 La Posada as community organizing, 1995 - 2001.
14 5 Program descriptions and committee structures, 1990 - 2001.
14 6 San Diego Friends Meeting House- Building plans, 1999 - 2000.

Newsletters

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14 7 LISTEN REAL LOUD, News of Women's Liberation Worldwide- Volumes 6-11.
14 8 SPOTLIGHT newsletter, 1984 - 1991.
14 9 Newsletters, A-D.
14 10 Newsletters, F-V.
14 11 Newsletters, Other.

WRITINGS AND REPORTS

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15 1 American Friends Service Committee Abuse Report 2000, 2000. Complaints of abuse on the U.S. Mexico Border and in the San Diego region by local and federal law enforcement agencies, includes drafts.
15 2 American Friends Service Committee Consultation on Mexico, November 6-9, 1997.
15 3 American Friends Service Committee Nationwide Women's Project, "Hear Our Voices". A resource directory of immigrant and refugee women's projects.
15 4 Abuse Case Information System for AFSC by Rebel Enterprise Developing Computer Applications Research, 1995.
15 5 AFSC v. Thornburgh: Immigration, Employments and Religious Freedom.
15 6 American Friends Service Committee- EL OBRERO Y SUS DERECHOS, 1981. With illustrations by David Avalos.
15 7 American Friends Service Committee Programs Focusing on Immigration.
15 8 Assessment of Present Policies Impacting Migrants and Refugees- Preliminary draft, February 10, 1996.
15 9 Background and Perspectives on the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Free Trade Talks, April 10, 1991.
15 10 Bi-national Human Rights Report- Description, September, 1997. Includes original interviews for study.
15 11 Border Violence Against Immigrant and Refugee Children, October, 1990. Presentation by Maria Jimenez at the National Conference on Immigrant and Refugee Children in the United States, Los Angeles.
15 12 Bridges Project- Report on activities, July 1995-January 1996.
15 13 Brief of Anti-Discrimination Groups, July 24, 1989. In support of the AFSC's Legal Challenge to Employer Sanctions Provisions of IRCA.
15 14 CENTURY AND A HALF OF WAR, Conflict and Human Rights, 1998.
15 15 Claude, Judy. "The Political Economy of Cocaine", December, 1990. A report and analysis prepared for the Community Relations Divisions of the AFSC.
15 16 Community Education Program- Outline.
15 17 Complaint reports, 1991 - 1992.
15 18 Complaints of abuse, 1995 - 1999.
15 19 Deportee Monitoring Project, June-July, 2000. Project involved Roberto Martinez, Leticia Jimenez, Christina Getrich, and Matthew Breigh.
15 20 LOS DESAPARECIDOS OF THE BORDER: Testimonies by Migrants and Their Families, 1996.
15 21 Development of Immigration Policy in the United States since 1979, September 30, 1983. Immigrants and Refugees in the Caribbean Basin Nations- A panel presented by AFSC at XI International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Mexico City
15 22 Dia de los Muertos- Nationwide Action Report.
15 23 Evaluation Report of the U.S.-Mexico Program of the American Friends Service Committee- Final version, April 3, 1987.
15 24 Evaluation of the Southern California Area Program, 1993. Includes copies of revised drafts.
15 25 Evaluation of the Southern California Area Program, Pacific Southwest Region- Preliminary draft, 2000.
15 26 Evaluation of the U.S./Mexico Border Program- Draft, 1997. Conducted January-May, 1997 presented to the Pacific Southwest Regional Executive committee, June 14, 1997
15 27 Evaluation of the Southern California Area Program, 2000 - 2001. Conducted September, 2000-February, 2001 and presented to the Pacific Southwest Regional Executive committee, February 10, 2001.
15 28 FROM GLOBAL PILLAGE TO GLOBAL VILLAGE, 1993. "A Perspective from Working People and People of Color on the Unregulated and Internationalization of the Economy and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)."
15 29 GLOBALIZATION: New Questions and New Answers, February, 2000. Draft discussion paper from the National Community Relations Unit
15 30 Hart, Statia. "Native Americans on Death Row in the United States", 1996. Prepared for Community Relations Division of the American Friends Service Committee.
15 31 HOPIS AND NAVAJOS: UNDERSTANDING THEIR LAND DISPUTES AND DEVELOPING POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS. Prepared by members of the Arizona Area Committee of the American Friends Service Committee.
15 32 House Subcommittee on International Law, September 29, 1993. Immigration and Refugees of the Committee on the Judiciary House of Representatives, Testimony of Roberto Martinez.
15 33 IMMIGRANT BASHING- MORE THAN A WAR OF WORDS.
15 34 Immigration proposal- 18 month team approach, 1994.
15 35 IN DEFENSE OF HUMAN RIGHTS ON THE U.S./MEXICO BORDER, 2000.
15 36 AN INFINITE OCEAN OF LIGHT- Address by Stephen G. Cary..., November 17, 1990. to the Annual Gathering of the American Friends Service Committee.
16 1 Immigration, Naturalization Service- Border Patrol and Customs Complaints- Drafts 1-3, 1994. Compiled by U.S.-Mexico Border Program and Centro de Asuntos Migratorios.
16 2 INS-Customs-Border Patrol complaints, San Diego, 1993 - 1994.
16 3 Kamel, Rachael. "This Is How It Starts- Women Maquila Workers in Mexico".
16 4 Legal Reference Fund- Office expansion draft.
16 5 Living Feminisms in AFSC Workplaces: Naming Issues and Policies, 1999. Notes from discussions at the Women's Lunch-brunch
16 6 List of complaints received involving trolley security guards, 1993.
16 7 Looking for Justice, Holding the Peace Gang Truce and La Rebellion Four Months Later, September, 1992. Report by Ched Myers, co-director of programs, PSWRO
16 8 Martinez, Roberto. "Community Oriented Policing", June 10, 1997.
16 9 Martinez, Roberto- Editorial commentary, 1994.
16 10 Martinez, Roberto, "La Frontera- The Border: 155 Years of Uneasy Existence", VOZ FRONTERIZA, October, 1991.
16 11 Martinez, Roberto. "A Humanitarian Policy for Immigrants and Refugees", August 20, 1993.
16 12 Martinez, Roberto. "INS Raids in North County", January, 1984.
16 13 Martinez, Roberto. "Introduction", December 10, 1999.
16 14 Martinez, Roberto. "Lack of Housing, or Xenophobia".
16 15 Martinez, Roberto. Quincentennial: 500 Years of Resistance- Handwritten draft.
16 16 Martinez, Roberto. "Spotlight" article.
16 17 Martinez, Roberto- Testimony on government proposed ditch, April 19, 1989.
16 18 Mexico- U.S. Border Program Immigration Study Group- Working paper, September 17, 1981.
16 19 New York Metropolitan Regional Office- Immigrant Rights Program, October 15, 1996. Submitted by Denis Johnston and Blanca Molina.
16 20 Operacion Guardian: Exito o Verguenza Nacional?, December 13, 1994.
16 21 Operation Blockade, A City Divided: A Report from the American Friends Service Committee's ILEMP.
16 22 Pacific Southwest Region- Southern California Area Program Committee- Comprehensive Program. U.S.-Mexico Border Program- Fiscal years, 2000-2001
16 23 Pacific Southwest Region- Staff reports, 1984 - 2001.
16 24 Pacific Southwest Region- U.S.-Mexico Border Program- Weekly activity report, 1991 - 1992.
16 25 Peace Action Network- Endorsement form, 1991.
16 26 PEACE DIVIDEND: HOW TO GET IT AND HOW TO USE IT, March, 1992.
16 27 Petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States, August, 1992. Partial Document
16 28 Petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States, 1999. Submitted on behalf of American Civil Liberties Union of San Diego and Imperial Counties and California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation.
16 29 Police Abuse Report 1995 and 1996, October 3, 1996. Compiled for the second consultation on human and civil rights strategies for the Latino community.
16 30 Preliminary comments for consideration in drafting. proposed Section 503 regulations on standards on enforcement activities.
16 31 Principal questions and responses of interviews by media with Roberto Martinez.
16 32 Project VOICE: Human Dignity, Legalization, and Immigrants' Right, March, 2002 - 2005.
17 1 Promoting Peace and Justice: A Plan for AFSC's Future, 1999.
17 2 Proposal to Access the Feasibility of Developing a Training and Technical Assistance Initiative. Targeted to Latino Constituencies of the Southwest.
17 3 Proposal to merge Centro de Asuntos Migratorios with the U.S. Mexico Border Program, 1993.
17 4 Proposed policy statement on treatment of immigrants.
17 5 Proyecto de Derechos de los Immigrantes- "Plan de Accion" para immigrantes Latinos, June, 1996.
17 6 PUERTAS ABIETAS- A Center for Women Immigrants, 1997. Proposal by Kenna Barrett.
17 7 Report of the U.S.-Mexico Border Program- Documented Abuse on the Southern California Border with Mexico, 1999.
17 8 Report to the AFSC board of directors, 2000 - 2001. On behalf of the advisory committee for the AFSC Washington office/Davis house.
17 9 Reporte sobre las Violaciones a los Derechos Humanos de Migrantes en San Diego, California, 1988 - 1989. Centro Binacional de Derechos Humanos y AFSC- Casos documentados- Mayo 1988-1989.
17 10 Salvadoran Emergency Legal Assistance Project- Status report, October, 1995.
17 11 San Diego Legal Defense Center- Centro para Ley y Justicia - Draft proposal, June, 1986. A project of AFSC and Coalition for Law and Justice of San Diego.
17 12 State Department of Health Service Investigations Unit - Complaints, 1993 - 1994.
17 13 Statement on Human and Civil Rights Violations: U.S.-Mexico Border at San Diego, California, August, 1988. Released by AFSC and Coalition for Law and Justice.
17 14 Statistical reports, 1979 - 2000. Part 1. Includes border fatalities and human and civil rights complaints.
17 15 Statistical reports, 1979 - 2000. Part 2. Includes border fatalities and human and civil rights complaints.
17 16 The Story of American Friends Service Committee U.S.-Mexico Border Program.
17 17 Summary of Testimony of Roberto Luis Martinez, September, 1986. As presented to House Judiciary Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, for HR 2452- Federal Law Enforcement Officer Review Act.
17 18 Surveillance and Documentation Plan, May, 1997.
17 19 Testimony before Joint Committee, December 3, 1987. On Refugee Resettlement International Migration and Cooperative Development given by Roberto Martinez.
17 20 Testimony of Roberto Martinez- Summary, April 5, 1988.
17 21 Testimony of Roberto Martinez before California Legislative Joint Committee, June 22, 1990. On Refugee Resettlement, International Migration and Cooperative Development, on International Migration and Border Regional Violence.
17 22 Three year proposal for the U.S.-Mexico border program- Summary.
17 23 Transcript of the Special Hearing on Human Rights and Civil Rights Abuses in the U.S./Mexico Border Region.
18 1 Underpinnings and Consequences- U.S. Policy and the Militarization of Mexico, 1998. Prepared by Matthew Yarrow for the Latin America/Caribbean Program of the AFSC Peacebuilding Unit.
18 2 United States Border Patrol Violations of United Nations Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officers, July, 1980. An Exploratory Study, Prepared by Community Research associates for American Friends Service Committee.
18 3 United States Commission on Civil Rights, April 16-17, 1993. Joint Arizona and California Advisory Committee Forum on Border-related Civil Rights Issues, presentation by Roberto Martinez.
18 4 United States House of Representatives Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control, February, 1986. Written testimony by Roberto Martinez.
18 5 United States-Mexico Border Progra