Ieva Jusionyte is an anthropologist and associate professor at Brown University. A former paramedic and Harvard Radcliffe and Fulbright fellow, she is the author of the award-winning Threshold: Emergency Responders on the US-Mexico Border.
""Traces the deadly pipeline of assault weapons into the hands of organized crime."" * Rolling Stone * ""An extraordinarily brave researcher, [Jusionyte] spent years getting to know gun runners, members of critical gangs, law enforcement officials on both sides of the border, and the journalists and community members who have witnessed the terrible toll of U.S.-made guns in Mexico. . . . In her epilogue, Jusionyte makes suggestions for enlightened policies to mitigate the plague of gun violence in Mexico and the ‘border crisis’ caused by people fleeing repression and extortion."" * The Progressive * ""It is a must-read in a conversation that is surely to continue heating up."" * The Daily Beast * ""A deep dive into how and why guns from the United States are continually flowing into Mexico."" * WBUR's ""Here and Now"" * ""A work of remarkable diligence, shrewdness, and empathy that follows the 'iron river' of firearms that flows from north to south; the violence this trade generates; and the players that keep it in motion."" * Harvard Radcliffe Institute * ""Jusionyte focuses her narrative overview largely on guns based on multiple interviews with people on every side of gun smuggling, from those trying to prevent illegal exports from the United States to those using the weapons for sport or murder in Mexico. The book reflects her background as an anthropologist and ethnographer and employs the skills of a journalist."" * Revista: Harvard Review of Latin America * ""It wasn’t until [Jusionyte] worked as an emergency paramedic along both sides of the border in Nogales, Arizona—and earned a PhD that included ethnographic research—that she was thrust into a world that forced her seismic mental shift away from popular beliefs about guns and the U.S.-Mexico border."" * The Guadalajara Reporter * ""The book’s success lies in the people she meets and the stories they tell…Jusionyte reports these stories richly and with great sympathy."" * Consequence * ""Jusionyte was reluctant to start research into guns, but the primary accelerant of the cycle of violence and migration seemed just too obvious, and too little remarked on in the US, to ignore."" * London Review of Books *