facebook pixel
Skip to Main Content
Boston University School of Law

  • Academics
  • Admissions & Aid
  • Faculty & Research
Search
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Employers
  • Journalists
Search
  • Academics
    • Academic Enrichment Program
    • Find Degrees and Programs
    • Explore Your Options
    • Study Abroad
    • Academic Calendar
  • Admissions & Aid
    • JD Admissions
    • Graduate Admissions
    • Tuition & Fees
    • Financial Aid
    • Visits & Tours
  • Faculty & Research
    • Faculty Profiles
    • Activities & Engagements
    • Centers & Institutes
    • Faculty Resources
  • Experiential Learning
    • Clinics & Practicums
    • Externship Programs
    • Simulation Courses
    • Law Journals
    • Moot Court
  • Careers & Professional Development
    • Judicial Clerkship Program
    • Career Advising for Graduate Students
    • Employment Statistics
    • Legal Career Paths
    • Public Service Programs
    • Sua Sponte Podcast
  • Student Life
    • Law Student Well-Being
    • Law Student Organizations
    • Boston Legal Landscape
  • Law Libraries
    • About the Libraries
    • A-Z Database List
    • Institutional Repository
  • About BU Law
    • Offices & Services
    • Meet the Dean
    • Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
    • Visit Campus
  • News & Stories
    • All Stories
    • BU Law in the Media
    • BU Law News
    • Collections
    • Past Issues of The Record

Want to Support BU Law?Learn how you can give back


Latest Stories From The Record

Enrique Alberto Prieto-Ríos
Human Rights

Localizing International Law

Read more
Veterans and First Responders

Comrades in Law School

Read more
SCOTUS

The Shapiro Lecture: In Conversation with U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor

Read more
Emmanuel Arnaud
Criminal Procedure

Tracking the Treatment of the US Territories

Read more
The Record
News & Stories from BU Law
  • Issues
  • All Stories

Boston-Area Volunteers Offer Legal Advice To Migrants In Tijuana

Julie Dahlstrom, Karen Pita Loor, and Sarah Sherman-Stokes accompanied Jesus Zelaya (’20), Genesis Guzman (’19), and Chelsea Tejada (’20) to Tijuana to help migrants apply for asylum in the US.

Thousands of migrants, many of them from Central America, are waiting in Tijuana, Mexico, for a chance to apply for asylum in the United States.

It’s a fluid situation on the ground. Many of the migrants shuffle between tents and shelters as volunteers pass out meals and warm clothing.

A group of Boston University law instructors and students was in Tijuana over the weekend offering legal advice. The group began their work each morning around 7:30 as large crowds of people gathered at the plaza in front of “El Chaparral,” a border crossing near San Ysidro, California.

Families huddled together around their belongings, with young children wearing pajamas and carrying backpacks. Some of them entertained themselves playing a pickup soccer game, kicking around an empty plastic bottle of Sprite. They were all there hoping it would be the day their numbers are called from the asylum waitlist.

A man began calling out numbers, reading from a notebook. The crowd gathered around him.

There are an estimated 5,000 people on the list, waiting for their turn to enter the U.S. and apply for asylum, a humanitarian immigration status. Many of those on the list have been in Tijuana for months, coming from other cities in Mexico and places as far away as Sierra Leone and Haiti.

The BU law instructors and students circulated throughout the crowd, asking people if they have questions about how to seek asylum.

One of the BU students, Jesus Zelaya, is of Honduran and Salvadoran descent. He says that’s a big motivator for him being down there.

“Coming from an immigrant background, I understand the challenges and struggles of being an immigrant, and this allows me essentially to reflect on what my life would be like if I was still in El Savador,” he said. “I wouldn’t be in law school.”

Zelaya handed out pamphlets about migrant rights and explained the asylum process to many of the people waiting in the plaza.

Julie Dahlstrom, a clinical associate professor who heads up the immigrants’ rights clinic at BU School of Law, spoke with a woman who says she fled cartel violence in Michoácan, Mexico. Dahlstrom says most of the migrants she spoke with had little knowledge of their rights or the risks associated with applying for asylum.

Read the full WBUR story

 

Related News

  • BU Law and School of Social Work Team Aids Detainees in Arizona
  • Dalia Fuleihan (’18) Earns Immigrant Justice Corps Fellowship
  • One case, one victory: BU Law Students Win Asylum for a Political Activist from Somalia
  • Share this story

Share

Boston-Area Volunteers Offer Legal Advice To Migrants In Tijuana

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Issues
  • All Stories
  • About & Contact

More about School of Law

Also See

  • ABA Required Disclosures
  • Licensing Disclosures
  • Statement of Nondiscrimination

Contact Us

  • JD Admissions
  • LLM & Graduate Admissions
  • Offices & Services
  • Faculty & Staff Directory
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
© 2025 Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Employers
  • Journalists
Search
Boston University

Boston University School of Law
765 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, MA 02215

  • © Boston University
  • Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility
  • Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)
Boston University Masterplate