Four international points of entry connect Ciudad Juárez and El Paso: theBridge of the Americas, theYsleta–Zaragoza International Bridge, thePaso del Norte Bridge, and theStanton Street Bridge. Combined, these bridges allowed 22,958,472 crossings in 2008,[9] making Ciudad Juárez a major point of entry and transportation into the U.S. for all of central northern Mexico. The city has a growing industrial center, which in large part is made up by more than 300maquiladoras (assembly plants) located in and around the city. According to a 2007New York Times article, Ciudad Juárez was "absorbing more new industrial real estate space than any other North American city".[7] In 2008,fDi Magazine designated Ciudad Juárez "The City of the Future".[10]
A painting of the Guadalupe Mission in the 1850s. The Presidio del Paso del Rio Norte can be seen to the right in the far background.Juárez mission and cathedral
The population of the entire district was close to 5,000 in 1750 when theApache attacked the other native towns and ranchos around the missions. Additional Presidios were established to counter them. One Presidio, San Elzeario, was established nearEl Porvenir in 1774, where it remained until being moved in 1788 to what is nowSan Elizario, Texas, where that settlement grew up around that Presidio. Another wasPresidio de San Fernando de Carrizal, which was established in 1774 at the San Fernando settlement that became present-dayCarrizal, Chihuahua.[11]: 39–40
During theMexican–American War, theBattle of El Bracito took place nearby on Christmas Day, 1846. The 1848Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo established the Rio Grande as the border between Mexico and the United States. The main channel of the Rio Grande had moved southwestward leaving the settlements of Ysleta, Socorro, and San Elzeario on the Camino Real on the north bank of the river, isolated from the rest of the towns, in Texas.
Other settlements on the east bank of the Rio Grande were not part of a town at that time; as the U.S. Army set up its installations settlements grew around it. This would later become El Paso, Texas. From that time until around 1930, populations on both sides of the border moved freely across it.[citation needed]
In 1853, a new border adjustment occurred when the territory of La Mesilla was sold to the United States, with which the new border line after the Rio Grande began precisely in Paso del Norte, reinforcing its status as a border town.
During theFrench intervention in Mexico (1862–1867),Benito Juárez's republican forces stopped temporarily at El Paso del Norte before establishing hisgovernment-in-exile in Chihuahua. After 1882, the city grew, in large part, because of the arrival of the Mexican Central Railway. Commerce thrived in the city as more banks began operating, telegraph and telephone services became available, and trams appeared. These commercial activities were under the firm control of the city's oligarchy, which consisted of the Ochoa, Samaniego, Daguerre, Provencio, and Cuarón families. In 1888, El Paso del Norte was renamed in honor of Benito Juárez.
The city expanded significantly thanks toPorfirio Díaz's free-trade policy, creating a new retail and service sector along the old Calle del Comercio (now Vicente Guerrero) and September 16 Avenue. A bullring opened in 1899. The Escobar brothers founded the city's first institution of higher education in 1906, the Escuela Particular de Agricultura. That same year, a series of public works are inaugurated, including the city's sewage and drainage system, as well as potable water. A public library, schools, new public market (the old Mercado Cuauhtémoc) and parks dotted the city, making it one of many Porfirian showcases.[clarification needed]
Modern hotels and restaurants were built to cater the increased international railroad traffic from the 1880s onwards. However, national and foreign opposition to the "disloyal" commercial rivalry of thefree zone was not long in coming and the Mexican government was forced to modify the status of the free zone in 1891. To this must be added the worldwide devaluation of silver andwater scarcity, which generated a severe economic crisis in the city, causing a significant number of workers to flee to the United States. As a result of the collapse of commercial activities and population, Ciudad Juárez focused on tourism as an economic activity at the beginning of the 20th century, particularly promoting "diversions", thus beginning "the moment of scandal"[12]
Taft and Díaz, historic first presidential summit, Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, 1909
In 1909, Díaz andWilliam Howard Taft planned a summit in Ciudad Juárez and El Paso, a historic first meeting between a Mexican and a U.S. president, and also the first time a U.S. president would cross the border into Mexico.[13] But tensions rose on both sides of the border over the disputedChamizal strip connecting Ciudad Juárez to El Paso, even though it would have been considered neutral territory with no flags present during the summit.[14] TheTexas Rangers, 4,000 U.S. and Mexican troops, U.S. Secret Service agents, FBI agents and U.S. marshals were all called in to provide security.[15]Frederick Russell Burnham, the celebrated scout, was put in charge of a 250 private security detail hired byJohn Hays Hammond.[16][17] On October 16, the day of the summit, Burnham and Private C.R. Moore, a Texas Ranger, discovered a man holding a concealedpalm pistol standing at the El Paso Chamber of Commerce building along the procession route.[18][19] Burnham and Moore captured, disarmed, and arrested the assassin within only a few feet of Díaz and Taft.[20][21]
The city was Mexico's largest border town by 1910. As such, it held strategic importance during theMexican Revolution. In May 1911, about 3,000 revolutionary fighters under the leadership ofFrancisco I. Madero laid siege to Ciudad Juárez, which was garrisoned by 500 regular Federal troops under the command of General Juan José Navarro. Navarro's force was supported by 300 civilian auxiliaries and local police. After two days of heavy fighting most of the city had fallen to the insurrectionists and the surviving federal soldiers had withdrawn to their barracks. Navarro then formally surrendered to Madero. The capture of a key border town at an early stage of the revolution not only enabled the revolutionary forces to bring in weapons and supplies from El Paso, but marked the beginning of the end for the demoralized Diaz regime.[22]
During the subsequent years of the conflict,Pancho Villa and other revolutionaries struggled for the control of the town (and income from the Federal Customs House), destroying much of the city during battles in1911 and 1913. Much of the population abandoned the city between 1914 and 1917. Tourism, gambling, and light manufacturing drove the city's recovery from the 1920s until the 1940s. A series of mayors in the 1940s–1960s, like Carlos Villareal and René Mascareñas Miranda, ushered in a period of high growth and development predicated on the PRONAF border industrialization development program.
A beautification program spruced up the city center, building a series of arched porticos around the main square, as well as neo-colonial façades for main public buildings such as the city health clinic, the central fire station, and city hall. The cathedral, built in the 1950s, gave the city center the flavor of central Mexico, with its carved towers and elegant dome, but structural problems required its remodeling in the 1970s. The city's population reached some 400,000 by 1970. In 1984, the city had aradiation incident after a private medical company illegally purchased a radiation therapy unit. It was dismantled, sold to a junkyard and later smelted to produce six thousand tons ofrebar (which is used to reinforce buildings), exposing thousands to radiation.
View of the Plaza de la Mexicanidad in north central Juárez
Juárez has grown substantially in recent decades due to a large influx of people moving into the city in search of jobs with themaquiladoras. As of 2014[update] more technological firms have moved to the city, such as theDelphi Corporation Technical Center, the largest in the Western Hemisphere, which employs over 2,000 engineers. Largeslum housing communities calledcolonias have become extensive.
Juárez has a long, notorious history ofdrug trafficking and the intense related violence.[23] Mexico's first homegrown cartel, run byIgnacia Jasso, was seated in the city, and for a time controlled much of the border drug trade.[24] Today theJuárez Cartel controls the routes in Juárez. Related violence in the city is responsible for more than 1,000 unsolvedmurders of young women from 1993 to 2003.[citation needed]
Juárez is known for being a leading export city. International sales of Juárez in 2020 were US$54.9B, 13.7 percent more than the previous year. The products with the highest level of international sales in 2020 were data processing machines and data processing units, not elsewhere specified or included elsewhere (US$22.8B), electrical wires and cables (US$3.89B), and instruments and appliances used in medical sciences (US$2.78B).[25] International purchases of Juárez in 2020 were US$48.3B, 16.7 percent more than the previous year. The products with the highest level of international purchases in 2020 were Electronic Integrated Circuits (US$9.96B), Parts and Accessories of Machines (US$8B), and data processing machines and data processing units, not elsewhere specified or included elsewhere (US$4.51B).[25]
Due to its location in theChihuahuan Desert and high altitude, Ciudad Juárez has acold desert climate (Köppen:BWk). Seasons are distinct, with hot summers, mild springs and autumns, and cold winters. Summer average high is 35 °C (95 °F) with lows of 21 °C (70 °F). Winter highs average 14 °C (57 °F) with lows of 0 °C (32 °F). Rainfall is scarce and greater in summer. Snowfalls occur occasionally (about four times a year), between November and March. On December 26/27, 2015, parts of the city received 40 cm (16 in) of snow within a 24-hour period beating the previous record of 28 cm (11 in) set in 1951.[26] The record high is 49 °C (120 °F) and the record low is −23 °C (−9 °F).
Climate data for Ciudad Juárez (Downtown), elevation: 1,135 m (3,724 ft), 1971-2001 normals
Skyline of Ciudad JuárezReplica of theArc de Triomphe marking the entrance of the exclusive Campos Elíseos residential community. In the background, Hospital Ángeles
Ciudad Juárez has many affluent neighborhoods, such asCampestre, Campos Elíseos, and Misión de Los Lagos. Other neighborhoods, includingAnapra,Chaveña, and Anáhuac, would be considered more marginal, while the remaining neighborhoods in Juárez represent the middle- to working-class, for example, Infonavit, Las Misiones, Valle de Juárez, Lindavista, Altavista, Guadalajara, Galeana, Flores Magón, Mariano Escobedo, Los Nogales, and Independencia.
Between the 1960s and 1990s, Juárez saw a high level of population growth due in part to the newly established maquiladoras. The end of theBracero Program also brought workers back from border cities in the U.S. through Ciudad Juárez, contributing to the growing number of citizens.[32]
The average annual growth in population over a 10-year period [1990–2000] was 5.3%.[33] According to the 2010 population census, the city had 1,321,004 inhabitants, while the municipality had 1,332,131 inhabitants. During the last decades the city has received migrants from Mexico's interior, some figures state that 32% of the city's population originate outside the state of Chihuahua, mainly from the states ofDurango (9.9%),Coahuila (6.3%),Veracruz (3.7%) andZacatecas (3.5%), as well as fromMexico City (1.7%).[33]
However, a March 2009 article noted there has been a mass exodus of people who could afford to leave the city due to the ongoing violence from the Mexican Drug War. The article quoted a city planning department estimate of over 116,000 abandoned homes, which could roughly be the equivalent of 400,000 people who have left the city due to the violence.[34] A September 2010 article inThe Guardian said of Ciudad Juárez: "About 10,670 businesses – 40% of the total – have shut down. A study by the city's university found that 116,000 houses have been abandoned and 230,000 people have left."[35]
Crosses erected as a monument to victims of the Juárez femicides in front of the student union at the University of Utah
Violence towards women in the municipality increased dramatically between 1993 and the mid-2000s,[37] with approximately 370 girls and women murdered[38] and at least 400 women reported missing.[37] Much of the violence in the city is due to warring drug cartels, primarily the Juárez, Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels. As of September 2022, the war has taken the lives of 717 individuals, including 87 women.[39]
In 2012, the Juárezpolice department dismissed approximately 800 officers in an effort to clean up corruption within its ranks.[40] Recruitment goals set by the department called for the force to more than double.[41] In 2009, a vigilante group calling itself Juárez Citizens Command threatened to put a stop to all the perpetrators of violence if the government continued to fail to curb the violence in the city.[42] Government officials expressed concern that such vigilantism would contribute to further instability and violence.[43]
In 2008, General Moreno and the Third Infantry Company took over the fight against the cartels in town. They were removed in 2009, with the general and 29 of his associates now in custody and awaiting trial for charges of murder and civil rights violations.[44][45]
In response to increasing violence in the city, the presence of theMexican Armed Forces andFederal Police has almost doubled. By August 2009 there were more than 7500 soldiers augmented by an expanded and highly restaffed municipal police force.[46]
Chart showing decline in the murder rate. Source: InSightCrime.org
As of 2019[update], Juárez's murder rate placed #2 of the highest reported in the world, at104 murders per 100,000 inhabitants. An August 2008GQ article described a dispirited and disorderly atmosphere that permeated the city, caused by multiple factors including drug violence, government corruption and poverty.[23][47] As of February 2022, homicides in the city have reached a three-year low, with a total of 1412 homicides in the year 2021. However, Amnesty International estimates that as many as 95 percent of violent crimes go unreported, meaning there are questions to the accuracy of the 2021 figures.[48]
After the homicide rates escalated to the point of making Ciudad Juárez the most violent city in the world, violent crime began to decline in the early 2010s.[49] In 2012, homicides were at their lowest rate since 2007 when drug violence flared between theSinaloa andJuárez Cartel.[50] That trend has continued in 2015 with 300 homicides reported, the lowest number since 2006.[51] Explanations for the rapid decline in violence include the Sinaloa Cartel's success in defeating its rivals,[52] as well as federal, state and local government efforts to combat crime and improve the city's quality of life.[citation needed]
The cause of the reduction in crime is the subject of speculation. One theory attributes it to deals the rival gangs made to coexist once the federal police were withdrawn in 2011. Another holds that a more powerful trafficking network, such as Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán's Sinaloa cartel, might have moved in and restored a kind of "order among thieves."[53] Others attribute it to the end of the cartel war between Juárez and Sinaloa,[54] the arrest or dismissal of many policemen with cartel ties,[55] resolutions reached by liaisons between government and a group of local leaders called "La Mesa de Seguridad y Justicia",[56] and the creation of an anti-extortion squad to combat extortion inflicted upon local companies.[57] Crime was significantly reduced from 2010 to 2014, with 3,500 homicides in 2010 and 430 in 2014.[58] In 2015, there were only 311 homicides.[56]
The decrease in crime inspired more business in the city. Some citizens who left because of the violence have since returned with their families.[53] Many of them had moved their businesses to El Paso.[59] In addition, U.S. companies are investing more in Juárez.[55] Community centers work with victims of crime and teach women how to defend themselves. Citizens have also formed neighborhood watch groups and patrol neighborhoods.[53] "La Fundacion Comunitaria de la Frontera Norte" is giving young people career opportunities and giving people hope.[56]Technology HUB is a startup incubator working to diversify the city's economy and move the regions low-skill manufacturing industry into an innovation cluster.[60] Its economic development projects are in line with the research of University of Berkeley Professor Enrico Moretti. Innovation economies are found to be more adaptive to shifting tech and trade conditions and more resilient to the kind of civil unrest that plagued Ciudad Juarez in the past.[61] City officials have said that they have plans to increase tourism in the city.[55] For example, in April 2015, the city created a new campaign to increase tourism called "Juarez is waiting for you".[55] That same month, U.S. representativeBeto O'Rourke visited Juárez to give a speech about how much Juárez has changed for the better.[55] A children's museum was opened in honor of the children who lost their parents during the violent years. Businesses that were closed because of the violence and extortion have reopened in recent years.[57] The city's violence was depicted in the 2015 filmSicario, drawing criticism and calls for a boycott from Juárez mayorEnrique Serrano Escobar, who said the film presented a false and negative image of the city. He said the violence the film depicted was accurate through about 2010, and that the city had made progress in restoring peace.[62][63]
The El Paso Regional Economic Development Corporation indicated that Ciudad Juárez is the metropolis absorbing "more new industrial real estate space than any other North American city."[71] The Financial Times Group through its publication The Foreign Direct Investment Magazine ranked Ciudad Juárez as the "City of the Future" for 2007–2008.[72] The El Paso–Juárez area is a major manufacturing center.CommScope,Electrolux,Bosch,Foxconn,Flextronics,Lexmark,Delphi,Visteon,Johnson Controls,Toro,Lear,Boeing,Cardinal Health,Yazaki,Sumitomo, andSiemens are some of the foreign companies that have chosen Ciudad Juárez for business operations.[73][74]
The Mexican state of Chihuahua is frequently among the top five states in Mexico with the most foreign investment.[75] Many foreign retail, banking, and fast-food businesses have locations within Juárez.
In the 1990s, traditional brick kilns made up a big part of the economic informal sector. These were typically located in the poorer regions of Juárez. The kilns used open-air fires, where certain materials that were burned generated a lot of air pollution. Along with rapid industrialization, small brick kilns have been a big contributor to the high amount of air pollution in Ciudad Juárez.[76] While the Ciudad Juárez economy has largely been dependent on Maquiladora program, business leaders have undertaken initiatives to upskill and secure the city are larger stake in the global manufacturing economy.[77]Technology Hub is a business incubator that works with regionally based companies, on programs in skill development, and the transition into automation and industry 4.0.[78]
Juárez has four local newspapers:El Diario,El Mexicano,El PM andHoy.El Diario de Juárez,[79] is the founder ofEl Diario de El Paso.El Norte was a fifth, but it ceased operations on April 2, 2017, following the murder of journalistMiroslava Breach,[80] the paper explained, the recent killings of several Mexican journalists made the job too dangerous.[81]
The main public transportation system in the city is the public bus system. The public buses run the main streets of Ciudad Juárez throughout the day, costing eight pesos (less than 40 cents) to ride one. Due to the aging current bus fleet being considered potentially outdated, the municipal government is working on replacing the buses with new ones, along with improving the bus stops, by equipping them with shade.[citation needed]
The ViveBusbus rapid transit (BRT) system opened to the public in November 2013 with the first route of five planned. The project was made a reality with the collaboration of the local municipal government, the private enterprise of Integradora de Transporte de Juárez (INTRA) as well as other city government agencies. Studies have shown that the current bus system averages 13 km/h (8 mph) while the new system is projected to average 26 km/h (16 mph). The BRT system studies conducted by the Instituto Municipal de Investigación Y Planeación project a daily ridership of 40,000. In late March 2024, the system was reopened and rebranded to “Juárez Bus”, with the construction of stations all around the city prior to the reopening.[83] This was due to the massive failure that was the ViveBus, only having very partial success in the city of Chihuahua, where the system was based, and seen by locals as a major money waste.[84] Today, the new bus system operates around 100 BRT-1 Mercedes-Benz buses.
The first of the five routes opened to users in late 2013 and is officially named Presidencia-Tierra Nueva and has 34 stations distributed along the north to south corridor. The route starts at Avenida Francisco Villa, follows north to Eje Vial Norte-Sur then veers left at Zaragoza Blvd. and ends at Avenida Independencia and the elevated Carretera Federal 2.[citation needed]
View of El Paso from the Ciudad Juárez side of the border
The first bridge to cross the Rio Grande at El Paso del Norte was built in the time ofNew Spain, over 250 years ago, from wood hauled in from Santa Fe.[85] Today, this bridge is honored by the modernSanta Fe Street Bridge, and Santa Fe Street in downtown El Paso.
According to the latest estimates, the literacy rate in the city is in line with the national average: 97.3% of people above 15 years old are able to read and write.[33]
2. TheAutonomous University of Ciudad Juárez (Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez, UACJ), founded in 1968, is the largest university in the city. It has several locations inside of the city including the Institute of Biomedical Sciences (Instituto de Ciencias Biomédicas, ICB), the Institute of Social and Administrative Sciences (Instituto de Ciencias Sociales y Administrativas, ICSA), the Institute of Architecture, Design and Art (Instituto de Arquitectura, Diseño y Arte, IADA), the Institute of Engineering and Technology (Instituto de Ingeniería y Tecnología, IIT) and the University City (Ciudad Universitaria, CU) located in the southern part of Ciudad Juárez. The IADA and IIT share the same location appearing to be a single institute where the students from both institutes share facilities as buildings or classrooms with the exception of the laboratories of Engineering and the laboratories of Architecture, Design and Arts. The UACJ also has spaces for Fine Arts and Sports. These latter services are considered among the best because they recluse nearly 30,000 participants in sports such as swimming, racquetball, basketball and gymnastics, and arts such asClassical Ballet,Drama,Modern Dance,Hawaiian andPolynesian Dances,Folk dance, Music andFlamenco.
3. The Faculty of Political and Social Sciences of theAutonomous University of Chihuahua (Universidad Autónoma de Chihuahua, UACH) which has delivered 70% of the city's media and news crew, is located in the city.
4. The local campuses of theMonterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education (ITESM) The Monterrey Institute of Technology opened its campus in 1983. It is ranked as "third best" among other campuses of the institution, after the Garza Sada campus in Monterrey and the Santa Fe campus in Mexico City.[citation needed]. Technology Hub Juarez offers after school coding program, Kids 2 Code[88] and is home to Fab Lab Juarez, a facility training people of all ages in the use of 3D printers, laser cutters, CNC routers and prototyping technology.[89]
5. The campus of the Autonomous University of Durango (UAD)
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^Flores Simental, Raúl (2017).Paso del norte en el siglo XXI : breve historia de Ciudad Juárez (in Spanish). Ciudad Juarez: Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez.
^O'Toole, Kathleen (June 10, 2013)."Enrico Moretti: The Geography of Jobs". Stanford. Stanford Graduate School of Business.Archived from the original on August 11, 2018. RetrievedJuly 30, 2018.
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^Paul Horgan,Great River: The Rio Grande in North American History. Volume 1, Indians and Spain. Vol. 2, Mexico and the United States. 2 Vols. in 1, 1038 pages – Wesleyan University Press 1991, 4th Reprint,ISBN0-8195-6251-3
^"History".www.sunmetro.net.Archived from the original on July 28, 2020. RetrievedMay 23, 2020.
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