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The magazine that analyzes the power of Mexican municipalities in the economy, governance and Mexico's relationship with the world.
Peace That Pays
In Mexico, crime prevention has moved beyond being solely a public security issue: it is now a key variable in competitiveness, investment attraction, and social stability. In a context where the country recorded a historic trade volume with the United States of $873 billion in 2025 and attracted approximately $41 billion in foreign direct investment, the message to its trade partners across the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania is clear: producing more is not enoug

Editorial
Apr 83 min read


Deadly Climate, Cities Under Pressure. The Public Health Battle That Will Shape Global Competitiveness
Climate change is no longer just an environmental debate; it has become a daily test of local governance, public health, and economic competitiveness. Municipalities are now where a decisive part of the new productive map between Mexico, the United States, and their trade partners across the Americas, Europe, and Africa is being drawn. When a city cannot respond to heat waves, dengue outbreaks, water shortages, or floods, the consequences go beyond quality of life. Industrial

Editorial
Mar 114 min read


The bilent Battle for control of the city: AI is already governing
In 2025, the promise of “smart cities” has moved beyond aspirational rhetoric and into a field of direct economic and political competition. Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer a technological add-on; it has become the new urban operating system. It determines which potholes are fixed first, how public transportation routes are adjusted in real time, where security resources are deployed, how water is prioritized during shortages, and which permits are accelerated to at

Editorial
Dec 15, 20253 min read


Code red at the border. Intelligence or chaos
Public security in Mexico and the United States is not about walls or speeches—it is about actionable, shared intelligence. In 2025, both governments shifted course by announcing Mission Firewall, a cooperation package that expands eTrace and ballistic identification to Mexico’s 32 states, creates real-time information-sharing platforms, and strengthens joint investigations against arms trafficking feeding violence south of the Rio Grande. In scope and architecture, it is the

Editorial
Oct 2, 20253 min read


Democracy at a click. How Mexico and the U.S. are rewriting citizen participation in 2025
Citizen participation is no longer synonymous with ballot boxes and physical assemblies. In 2024, a digital infrastructure matured that, today in 2025, is starting to change the political, economic, and technological rules of the game in Mexico and the United States. The evidence is clear: in Mexico, 83.1% of people used the internet in 2024 and 73.6% of households had access, although an urban-rural gap persists at 86.9% versus 68.5%. This surge in connectivity is the invisi

Editorial
Sep 25, 20253 min read


Companies at the Helm of Policy! CSR Already Rewriting the Mexico–U.S. Agenda
In 2025, the most decisive border between Mexico and the United States is not geographical: it is the one that separates governments that integrate Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) into their public policies from those that still view it as peripheral philanthropy. The evidence is overwhelming: regulatory co-creation with the private sector — anchored in verifiable social goals — accelerates investment, boosts productivity, and reduces political risks. In the United Stat

Editorial
Sep 4, 20253 min read


Double wall against the cartel. How the two Nogales accelerated border security in 2024… and what’s still missing in 2025
The Nogales–Nogales corridor became in 2024 the most visible laboratory for local cooperation against cross-border crime. While the DEA has documented that the Sinaloa Cartel channels its shipments near Arizona’s crossings — with Nogales as a key point — municipal police forces, supported by state and federal agencies, have moved from reactive coordination to operations based on shared intelligence and joint targets. Three gears sustain that cooperation. First, binational c

Editorial
Aug 18, 20253 min read


Training or chaos. The U.S.–Mexico border’s security is decided in the classroom
Border security is no longer defined solely by walls or equipment; it is determined in classrooms, simulators, and forensic labs. 2025 began under unprecedented pressure from fentanyl and its precursors, shifting migration flows, and increasingly tech-driven criminal networks. In this context, the professionalization of border officials customs agents, members of the National Guard, state and local police is the true dividing line between a resilient border and a high-risk co

Editorial
Aug 12, 20253 min read


Borders Under Fire: The Urgency of a Binational Policy Against Cross-Border Crime
In a context where interdependence between Mexico and the United States goes beyond economics and politics, cross-border crime has become a shared threat that undermines public safety, distorts markets, and violates human rights on both sides of the border. In 2024, data showed modest progress in preventive efforts, but these remain insufficient when facing the sophistication and constant evolution of criminal networks involved in drug trafficking, human smuggling, and the il

Editorial
Aug 6, 20253 min read


The Battle for the Ballot in Mexico City: Who Will Win the Capital's Vote in 2025?
At a decisive moment for the political course of Mexico’s capital, Mexico City is immersed in an electoral reconfiguration that could redefine not only its local political map but also federal projections heading toward 2030. The latest poll by Massive Caller, conducted on July 8, 2025, offers a clear snapshot of voting intentions in the city’s 16 boroughs. This citizen pulse check not only measures preferences—it also reveals trends in continuity, rejection, and political vo

Editorial
Jul 9, 20253 min read


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