Exploring the Effects of U.S. Immigration Enforcement on the Well-being of Citizen Children in Mexican Immigrant Families

Title

Exploring the Effects of U.S. Immigration Enforcement on the Well-being of Citizen Children in Mexican Immigrant Families

Creator

Gulbas, Lauren, E
Zayas, Luis, H

Subject

Mexican Immigration
Health and Well-Being
Immigration Enforcement

Description

In this article, we draw on ecocultural theories of risk and resilience to examine qualitatively the experiences of U.S. citizen children living with their undocumented Mexican parents. Our purpose is to render visible the various ways in which citizen children confront and navigate the possibilities—and realities—of parental deportation. We develop a framework to conceptualize the complex multidimensional, and often multidirectional, factors experienced by citizen children vulnerable to or directly facing parental deportation. We situate youth well-being against a backdrop of multiple factors to understand how indirect and direct encounters with immigration enforcement, the mixed-status family niche, and access to resources shape differential child outcomes. In doing so, we offer insights into how different factors potentially contribute to resilience in the face of adversity.

Publisher

The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences

Date

2017–7

Type

Text
Journal Article

Format

PDF

Identifier

https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7758/rsf.2017.3.4.04

Language

English

Files

Pdhistory source2.pdf

Citation

Gulbas, Lauren, E and Zayas, Luis, H, “Exploring the Effects of U.S. Immigration Enforcement on the Well-being of Citizen Children in Mexican Immigrant Families,” Santa Clara University Digital Exhibits, accessed November 23, 2024, https://dh.scu.edu/exhibits/items/show/2943.

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