Migration Highways: Causes and Consequences of Central American Migration
MTA
Root Causes, Transit Realities, and Policy Responses to Northbound Flows
2nd Edition
"Migration Highways" offers a comprehensive analysis of Central American migration, focusing on the interwoven "root causes," "transit realities," and "policy responses" driving northbound flows from Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. The book meticulously details how economic stagnation, profound inequality, and widespread informal employment create a powerful incentive for migration, further exacerbated by significant wage gaps and persistent labor demand in the United States. It highlights the demographic "youth bulge" in the Northern Triangle, where aspirations for a better future often collide with limited local opportunities and educational mismatches.
Beyond economic drivers, the book emphasizes the critical role of climate stressors like drought and extreme weather, which devastate rural livelihoods and erode food security, pushing vulnerable agricultural communities to seek alternative income sources through migration. Pervasive violence, including gang activity, organized crime, and gender-based violence, emerges as a potent push factor, forcing families and youth to flee in search of safety and security that their home states cannot provide. The fragility of state capacity, rampant corruption, and weak rule of law further diminish trust in institutions, making migration a rational response to systemic failure and impunity.
The book also dissects the complex journey north, detailing the dangerous overland and occasional maritime routes through Mexico. It exposes the predatory business of human smuggling, highlighting the immense risks of extortion, abuse, kidnapping, and the dire humanitarian needs of migrants on the road. Mexico's pivotal, yet often beleaguered, role as a transit country is examined, balancing U.S. enforcement pressure with its own burgeoning asylum system. Upon reaching the U.S. border, migrants face a labyrinth of processing, detention, and alternatives, where legal status dictates access to work, school, and the complex process of integration into destination communities.
Finally, "Migration Highways" proposes a roadmap for humane and effective migration management, acknowledging the inherent policy trade-offs between deterrence, protection, and development. It advocates for expanding lawful pathways, strengthening asylum mechanisms, and investing in targeted development interventions that address root causes while bolstering local governance and violence prevention. The book stresses the importance of international cooperation, burden-sharing, and a nuanced, evidence-based approach to transform migration from a desperate necessity into a safer, more orderly choice, underpinned by a commitment to human dignity across the entire migration journey.
This book is written for policymakers, practitioners, scholars, and informed readers seeking an evidence-based understanding of Central American migration dynamics. It will particularly benefit government officials working on immigration, foreign aid, or regional security; NGO workers and humanitarian agents assisting migrants; academics studying migration, Latin American studies, or development; and anyone interested in the complex realities driving northbound flows from Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador.
January 17, 2026
69,789 words
4 hours 53 minutes
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