Maps
in the News: El Salvador
The
Trump administration announced on Monday that nearly 200,000 people from El
Salvador who have lived in the United States for more than a decade must leave
the country. The administration is
giving the immigrants until September of 2019 before they could face
deportation.
The
immigrants from El Salvador were part of the humanitarian program—Temporary Protected
Status. This program allows immigrants
from designated countries to live and work (and pay taxes) in the U.S. without
fear of deportation. The program was
created by President George Bush in 1990, and immigrants from El Salvador were
included after devastating earthquakes in 2001.
Over the next 15 years, President George W. Bush and President Obama
extended the protection status.
The
Ball State University Libraries GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) includes
a unique collection of maps of El Salvador.
The map above (top, click to enlarge) is called El Salvador: The Struggle for Rural Control and was published in
1991 near the end of the country’s 13-year civil war. The map identifies areas controlled by the
rebel group, the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN). The red- and green-shaded areas depict areas
under the control of the FMLN. And
government army units are shown with the soldier icon.
The
GRMC also includes ortho-photographic maps of El Salvador at a scale of 1:5000
meters (above). These maps identify
important buildings in red, railways with the black line, and main roads with a
red line. The maps were published by the
National Geographic Institute of the Ministry of Public Works in Sal Salvador.
The
tourist map (above) identifies the locations of Pre-Columbian ruins and
historical sites, skiing and fishing areas, and beaches throughout the
country. El Salvador’s numerous
volcanoes and mountains are also depicted.
The map was published by the El Salvador Tourist Commission and also
includes an inset map showing travel times to U.S. cities.
The
GRMC also maintains a repository of digital maps related to current events and
social topics that may be used as visual aids for research papers and learning
projects. The map, Immigration Enforcement and Sanctuary Cities, was published by the
Catholic Legal Immigration Network in 2016.
The Missing Migrants Project published the map showing migrant deaths on
world borders from January through September 2014.
Migration Policy Institute’s Data Hub includes maps showing the U.S. immigrant
population by state and county, maps related to the Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals (DACA), and top immigrant populations by state and
cities. The map above identifies where
most of the immigrants from El Salvador are located in the United States.
The
digital collection of maps also includes large-scale maps that can be printed
using the plotters in the GRMC, or the maps may be projected digitally for
presentations. This collection also
includes posters that can be used for presentations about specific countries.
For
more information about the maps in the GRMC or using maps as visual aids in
research and learning, please contact Melissa Gentry at 765-285-1097.
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