From WOLA: Before More People Are Hurt: Why the Trump Administration’s ‘Joint Targeting’ Model Needs a Rethink
The Trump admin’s “kinetic warrior” posture in Latin America is off to a poor start: blowing up civilians on motorboats, torturing people on farms, directly participating in hostilities, and doubling down on long-discredited “drug war” tactics.
WOLA Report: Denouncing Into the Void: The Dismantling of Internal Oversight and Accountability at DHS
A year ago, the internal civil rights and detention watchdogs were gutted. Now, accountability is out of reach while abuses are worsening rapidly.
#BorderSecurity #HumanRights #Migration #OrganizationalCulture #WOLA #Writing
Ceny mieszkań na rynku deweloperskim w stolicy utrzymują trend wzrostowy. W lutym 2026 roku średnia cena metra kwadratowego wyniosła 19 546 zł, co oznacza wzrost o 10 proc. w skali roku. Sprawdzamy, gdzie ceny rosną najszybciej i ile kosztuje własne mieszkanie.
From WOLA: The “boat strikes” are still happening. Five things you need to know.
New commentary: we should never normalize the illegal, lethal Western Hemisphere boat strikes.
Ciekawi mnie, jak starsi mieszkańcy Woli odnoszą się do nowych "napływowych" mieszkańców, często z różnych stron Polski i niezwiązanych wcześniej z Warszawą, którzy kupili mieszkanie na Jana Kazimierza, Ordona czy na Kolejowej, w ten sposób, że nie pojawiali się stopniowo tylko zjawili się tu jedną wielką falą w ciągu ostatnich 10-15 lat.
A ci ludzie z kolei, czy oni też poczuwają się do "wolskości?". Pytanie można rozszerzyć na inne dzielnice, mnie w tej chwili interesuje #Wola.
From WOLA: Five Reasons Why Trump’s Anti-Cartel Military Plan Will Fail
After the New York Times revealed that the White House has directed the Defense Department “to begin using military force against certain Latin American drug cartels,” the team at WOLA got to work cobbling together a forceful, deeply informed response.
Dispatch from the Border: Ciudad Juárez, Mexico and El Paso, Texas
WRC and WOLA are deeply disturbed that we needed to travel to five different cities in three different countries to learn about what is happening in our own. However, what we learned on this trip reinforced the vital need for this research and documentation, especially as the scope and scale of immigration enforcement increases.
Dispatch from Mexico: Difficulties Abound for Both Deported Individuals and Service Providers
In Mexico, we learned that human rights defenders and service providers in this region, battered by the U.S. government’s budget cuts, have difficulty interacting with what, for now, is still a relatively small number of deported people, nearly all of whom leave Tapachula as quickly as possible.