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as single mothers in recent years, and the world of the children they have left behind in their home countries in Central America. Using award-winning photographs, Sonia Nazario takes you inside the journey made by millions of immigrant women who have come to the U.S. can both welcome the stranger and curtail unlawful migration by implementing three solutions rarely discussed in the heated immigration debate. In her talk, two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Sonia Nazario will discuss who is now coming to the U.S., the journey they make, and how the U.S. It became the leader in the modern-day movement to help people fleeing harm. has cut the number of refugees it accepts to virtually zero – a reversal of the moral reckoning this country had after WWII, when it turned away a ship with 900 Jews fleeing the holocaust. She began her career at the Wall Street Journal, and later joined the Los Angeles Times. She has honorary doctorates from Mount St. She is a graduate of Williams College and has a master’s degree in Latin American studies from the University of California, Berkeley. In 2012 Columbia Journalism Review named Nazario among “40 women who changed the media business in the past 40.” In 2018, she given the Spirit of HOPE (Hispanas Organized for Political Equality) Award. She has also been named among the most influential Latinos by Hispanic Business Magazine and a “trendsetter” by Hispanic Magazine. In 2020, Parade Magazine named her as one of the 52 most influential Latin American women in history. Nazario, who grew up in Kansas and in Argentina, has written extensively from Latin America and about Latinos in the United States. Also in 2016, the Houston Peace & Justice Center honored her with their National Peacemaker Award. In 2016, the American Immigration Council gave her the American Heritage Award. She also was named a 2015 Champion of Children by First Focus and a 2015 Golden Door award winner by HIAS Pennsylvania. Her recent humanitarian efforts to get lawyers for unaccompanied migrant children led to her selection as the 2015 Don and Arvonne Fraser Human Rights Award recipient by the Advocates for Human Rights. It was turned into a book by Random House and became a national bestseller.
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Published as a series in the Los Angeles Times, Enrique's Journey won the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing in 2003. She is best known for Enrique's Journey, her story of a Honduran boy’s struggle to find his mother in the U.S.