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Deborah W. Meyers
Associate

about


This person is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.

Deborah Meyers’ work at Carnegie focused on the management of the Canadian and Mexican borders, the U.S.-Mexico relationship, and reorganization of the structure of the U.S. immigration system. She also has worked on the worker verification system, the international refugee protection system, and U.S. immigration and refugee policy.

Prior to joining the Carnegie Endowment, Ms. Meyers was a policy analyst at the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform and a project associate for the U.S.-Mexico Binational Study on Migration. She also has served as a consultant with the Inter-American Dialogue and RAND.

Ms. Meyers earned her M.A. from the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University and her B.A. from Brandeis University, where she was Phi Beta Kappa. She has published a number of working papers as well as articles in such journals as The American Review of Canadian Studies, Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, Bender’s Immigration Bulletin, International Peacekeeping, and South Eastern Latin Americanist. Ms. Meyers also has been interviewed on radio talk shows and for newspaper articles.


All work from Deborah W. Meyers

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15 Results
book
Caught in the Middle: Border Communities in an Era of Globalization

This volume looks at the inner workings and realities of border communities along five international borders: United States-Canada, United States-Mexico, Germany-Poland, Russia-China, and Russia-Kazakhstan. The case studies focus on innovative cross-border initiatives and contribute unique insights into the daily lives and local perspectives of border communities.

· October 5, 2001
Washington
REQUIRED IMAGE
event
Conclusions of the U.S.-Mexico Migration Panel
February 15, 2001

Briefing featuring three members of the U.S.-Mexico Migration Panel, which released a report on February 14 to U.S. President George W. Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox including proposals to change and improve the U.S.-Mexico migration relationship.

REQUIRED IMAGE
event
North American Border Communities in the 21st Century
June 16, 2000

Part III of a conference series organized by the Self-Governance at the Borders project

event
Metropolis Conference
December 7, 1999

The Metropolis Project is a cooperative international policy research effort that includes public and private sector institutions from 18 countries and three intergovernmental organizations. The Fourth International Metropolis Conference was held in Washington, DC, in December 1999.

REQUIRED IMAGE
event
US-Mexico Borders Communities in the 21st Century
November 21, 1999

Part II of a conference series organized by the Self-Governance at the Borders project

REQUIRED IMAGE
event
US-Canada Border Communities in the 21st Century
September 28, 1999

Part I of a conference series organized by the Self-Governance at the Borders project