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The seesaws - called Teeter-Totters in the US - were slotted into gaps in the steel boundary that was already in place on the border, following 10 years of planning by designers in both countries.
Canales, 49, had taught design solutions focusing on the border at Yale and Princeton and written on the topic extensively. “I can’t keep doing this theoretically,” she remembered thinking.
There's a mix of people in encampments in Jacumba Hot Springs, California, a border town located at the U.S.-Mexico wall, and has migrants from all over the world - China, India, Turkey, and Mexico - ...