Project

Los Ninis: Mexico's Lost Generation

Ciudad Juarez, just across the border from El Paso, Texas, has become the murder capital of the world. Last year, 3,100 were killed. Since 2008, the city of 1.5 million has seen more casualties than the current war in Afghanistan, which has a population of 28 million.

The most vulnerable in Ciudad Juarez are Los Ninis, young men and women between the ages of 14 and 24 who earned their name from the phrase “ni estudian, ni trabajan”—those who neither work nor study.

There are about 10 million Ninis across Mexico, but the largest concentration is in Juarez.

Ninis as young as 13 are being lured from work and school by drug cartels that use them to kill for cash. They're offered $45 a hit, about as much as an unskilled worker earns in a week in Juarez. At the heart of the problem is desperate unemployment and poverty, which leads many of these young people to turn to the warring cartels for employment.

Journalist Susana Seijas and photographer Dominic Bracco have made multiple visits to Ciudad Juarez to document the fallout of this crisis that threatens to engulf an entire generation.

Mexico's Changing Psyche

With at least 48,000 casualties in the last five years, the drug war in Mexico has resulted in widespread desensitization to the violence that permeates daily life.

The War Next Door

Pulitzer Center grantee Dominic Bracco II speaks with KERA News about the impact of Mexico's bloody drug war on those living in Ciudad Juarez.