Throughout my academic, professional, and personal journey, I’ve worked on projects born from analysis, curiosity, and, often, the urgency to act. Here I share some of my academic publications, editorial collaborations, and personal projects that reflect my commitment to topics such as migration, economic development, gender equality, and the search for meaning through art and writing. Each of these works has been a way to build bridges — between countries, between disciplines, and between thought and action. To me, writing, researching, and creating are also acts of resistance: ways to imagine different futures and to give voice to what is so often left unsaid.
Mexican Mobility in Boston: Between Innovation, Students, and Qualified Mexicans Abroad
During my time working at the Mexican Consulate in Boston, I observed a growing community that rarely appears in public debates: Mexicans who move abroad not out of necessity, but in search of growth—students, professionals, and young innovators. Unlike traditional migrants, their mobility reflects ambition, education, and the desire to contribute globally. Yet, Mexican public policy still views its citizens abroad mainly through the lens of remittances and documentation.
In this essay, I explore how Boston’s Mexican community—students in higher education, young professionals, and emerging entrepreneurs—reveals both the potential and the limits of Mexico’s current foreign policy. I argue that it is time to rethink how we engage with our diaspora, not only as workers but as agents of innovation and knowledge exchange.