Escalando Fronteras

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The official EF Logo, taken from www.escalandofronteras.org

Escalando Fronteras (in English, "Climbing Borders") is a not-for-profit organization (in Mexico, an asociación civil) founded in 2014 that reaches out to at-risk youth in the "poverty polygons"[1] of Monterrey, Mexico through the sport of rock climbing. Escalando Fronteras' mission is "to empower youth through climbing and education."[2] The program takes groups of at-risk youth to the local indoor climbing gyms and national park Parque La Huasteca with the help of the local community, volunteers, psychologists, and professional athletes.

Origins[]

Conceived by researchers Nicklas Karlsson and Javier Hernandez, the organization was founded by local professor Dr. Nadia Vázquez to target at-risk youth in the marginalized regions of the metropolitan area of Monterrey,[3] Mexico in 2014. The program offers community support and life skills, based on research that sports like climbing can "be used as a tool for positive change for youth in underdeveloped areas of the world."[4]

History[]

In 2014, Dr. Vazquez began a six-month pilot-project and registered as a NGO in Mexico. December of that year, the Board of Directors formed, and at the same time Escalando Fronteras launched the "Climbing Beyond Cartels[5]" campaign on fundraising platform IndieGoGo, raising $16k.[6] The program has garnered media coverage from NatGeo Blog,[7] Mashable,[8] Reuters,[9] and climbing magazines Desnivel[10] and Rock & Ice.[11]

Rock climber Alex Honnold, famous for soloing one of the Mexico's tallest climbable cliff faces, was among the campaign's donors, for the perk of naming a new climbing route bolted by Escalando Fronteras mentor Gareth (Gaz) Leah. Other perks were artwork donated by local artist Ácaro and internationally-known climber and artist Renan Ozturk.

References[]

  1. ^ Smith, Worrall. "Mixing Methods in Mexico: Youth Gangs and Organized Crime in the "Structurally Maladjusted" areas of Monterrey"". Lund University. Retrieved 12 February 2015. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ "HOME". Escalando Fronteras. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
  3. ^ Ruiz González, Aminda; Portales Debez, Luiz (October 4, 2012). "Amilpa: Exemplo de participación ciudadana en acción colectiva para la obtención de servicios públicos" (PDF). 16 (36). REDALYC: 117–143. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ "Project". Escalando Fronteras.
  5. ^ "Climbing Above Cartels". IndieGoGo. Retrieved March 6, 2015.
  6. ^ "Escalando Fronteras: Climbing Beyond Cartels". IndieGoGo. December 5, 2014. Help Mexico's youth CLIMB beyond drugs, gangs, and drug cartels and on to a more promising future.
  7. ^ Rory Smith (December 8, 2014). "Beyond the Edge". National Geographic. How rock climbing is saving youth from gangs and drug cartels in Mexico.
  8. ^ Laird, Sam (December 1, 2014). "Getting to the top: How rock climbing saves kids from Mexico's drug gangs". Mashable.
  9. ^ Becerril, Daniel (January 24, 2015). "Escape from Mexico's gangs". Reuters. Retrieved March 6, 2015.
  10. ^ "Una asociación mexicana utiliza la escalada para sacar a niños del crimen organizado". Desnivel. May 30, 2014.
  11. ^ Parker, Chris (December 2, 2014). "Climbing Saves At-Risk Youth in Mexico". Rock & Ice.
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