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                  <text>Exploring the Effects of U.S. Immigration Enforcement on the Well-being of Citizen
Children in Mexican Immigrant Families
Author(s): Lauren E. Gulbas and Luis H. Zayas
Source: RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences , July 2017, Vol.
3, No. 4, Undocumented Immigrants and Their Experience with Illegality (July 2017),
pp. 53-69
Published by: Russell Sage Foundation
Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7758/rsf.2017.3.4.04
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�Exploring the Effects of U.S.
Immigration Enforcement on
the Well-being of Citizen
Children in Mexican
Immigrant Families
l au r en e. gulba s a n d luis h. z aya s

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.
Keywords: children, citizenship, deportation, undocumented, well-being

An estimated 4.5 million U.S. citizen children
live in families in which one or both parents
are undocumented (Pew Hispanic Research
Center 2013). Researchers are just beginning to
understand the ripple eﬀects of immigration
enforcement policies on immigrant families,
and particularly on those families whose members have diﬀerent authorizations, or mixedstatus families (Dreby 2013). Given escalations
in punitive measures that target undocumented individuals in the United States (Peutz

and De Genova 2010), a growing number of
citizen children face the harsh realities associated with parental deportation: forced family
separations, material deprivation, anxiety, and
depression (Gonzales and Chavez 2012; Zayas
2015). Citizen children living in Mexican immigrant families experience a disproportionate burden of risk because the sociopolitical
practices aimed at policing migrant illegality
increasingly target those of Mexican origin
(Dreby 2012).

Lauren E. Gulbas is an anthropologist and assistant professor in the School of Social Work at the University of
Texas, Austin. Luis H. Zayas is professor, endowed chair, and dean of the School of Social Work at the University of Texas, Austin.
© 2017 Russell Sage Foundation. Gulbas, Lauren E., and Luis H. Zayas. 2017. “Exploring the Effects of U.S. Immigration Enforcement on the Well-being of Citizen Children in Mexican Immigrant Families.” RSF: The Russell
Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 3(4): 53–69. DOI: 10.7758/RSF.2017.3.4.04. Support for this
research was provided by National Institute for Child Health and Human Development grant HD068874 to Luis
H. Zayas. We express our gratitude to the families who participated in this study. Direct correspondence to:
Lauren E. Gulbas at laurengulbas@austin.utexas.edu, School of Social Work, University of Texas, 1925 San
Jacinto Blvd., D3500, Austin, TX 78712; and Luis H. Zayas at lzayas@austin.utexas.edu, School of Social Work,
University of Texas, 1925 San Jacinto Blvd., D3500, Austin, TX 78712.

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�54

undocumen ted immigr a n ts a nd their ex perience w ith illega lit y

To date, research has highlighted the various ways in which immigration enforcement
practices increase the likelihood that citizen
children will experience academic challenges,
physical and mental health problems, and
cognitive and developmental delays (CavazosRehg, Zayas, and Spitznagel 2007; Kersey, Geppert, and Cutts 2007; Perreira and Ornelas
2011; Potochnik and Perreira 2010; SuárezOrozco and Yoshikawa 2013; Yoshikawa 2011;
Zayas and Bradlee 2015). Although this research has drawn much-needed attention to
the multilevel risk proﬁles of citizen children,
the predominant focus on risk has led to generalized assumptions about the vulnerability
of this population and overshadowed the
evaluation of citizen children’s strengths,
agency, and capacity (Panter-Brick 2014). This
speaks, in part, to the political nature of research on undocumented individuals and
their families. Most research, for good reason, advocates for changes to current immigration laws because studies have been able
to demonstrate the negative eﬀects such laws
have on citizen children in immigrant families. However, research that focuses attention
solely on issues of risk obscures the ways in
which citizen children actively navigate
stressful situations. Attention to processes of
resilience would oﬀer a valuable complement
to the literature.
In this article, we draw on ecocultural theories of risk and resilience to examine qualitatively the experiences of citizen children living with their undocumented Mexican parents
(Unger et al. 2013; Weisner 2010). We focus attention on how citizen children cope within
the context of current immigration enforcement and deportation policies. In doing so,
we identify factors that shape the well-being
of citizen children and highlight the contextual circumstances that have the potential to
produce variable individual outcomes. Our
paper is framed to address the following research questions: What are the eﬀects of immigration enforcement on the well-being of
citizen children? How do citizen children
cope with the fears associated with having an
undocumented parent? What strengths do citizen children draw on as they face the reali-

ties—and consequences—of parental deportation?
A N EC O C U LT U R A L P E R S P EC T I V E O N
R E S I LI E N C E I N M I X E D - S TAT U S
FA M I LI E S

Over the past decade, social scientists have
turned their attention to resilience-based research to counter the dominant focus on vulnerability, victimization, and suﬀering.
Whereas studies of risk attend to circumstances and behaviors that increase the likelihood of negative outcomes, resiliency approaches emphasize elements and processes
that sustain or promote well-being. As the anthropologist Catherine Panter-Brick notes,
studies of resilience “uncover how people manage to live their lives and make the best of dire
circumstances” (2014, 439). In such eﬀorts,
resiliency-oriented research can identify crucial leverage points that facilitate successful
coping and shape well-being.
Studies of resilience draw on a range of theoretical approaches that emphasize, to diﬀerent degrees, the salience of individual factors
and the broader context. Many social scientists
consider Urie Bronfenbrenner’s ecological
model to be foundational for understanding
how interactions between individuals and their
contextual environment shape childhood development (Bronfenbrenner 1979; Ungar,
Ghazinour, and Richter 2013). Bronfenbrenner
posits that proximal processes—those direct
interactions between children and their immediate social and material environments (microlevel)—are the basic elements shaping development (Bronfenbrenner and Morris 1998).
Broader ecological systems, such as the mesosystem (interaction between microsystems)
and macrosystem (broader cultural and structural context) were understood as both shaping
and being shaped by interactions in the microsystems (Bronfenbrenner 1993). In this way,
change within one system could reverberate
across systems.
Bronfenbrenner’s ecological approach has
inﬂuenced studies of risk and resilience by focusing attention to micro-, meso-, and macrolevel factors that inhibit or facilitate wellbeing (Ungar, Ghazinour, and Richter 2013).

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�t he effects of immigr at ion en forcemen t

Building on Bronfenbrenner’s model, anthropologists and sociologists have reconceptualized the role of culture within his ecodevelopmental framework, critiquing the
distal role that he presumed culture to play in
the lives of children and their families. As the
sociologist Jonathan Tudge argues, “what is
missing is that there is no sense . . . that cultural groups with values, beliefs, lifestyles,
and patterns of social interchange diﬀerent
from those found in North American middleclass communities would necessarily value different types of proximal processes” (2008, 72–
73). Eco- developmental approaches have
drawn little attention to the signiﬁcant ways
in which cultural processes directly shape
childhood experiences and outcomes. Such a
limitation is particularly relevant for studies
of citizen children, whose experiences are invariably aﬀected by macro-level contexts that
mandate discrepant treatment and access to
resources based on ethnicity and citizenship
status.
In light of this, our paper adopts an ecocultural approach that prioritizes attention to culture, or the everyday activities, routines, and
behaviors that children enact within their surrounding environment (Super and Harkness
1986; Trudge 2008; Weisner 2010; Worthman
2010). Ecocultural theory emphasizes the importance of family practices and strategies
that families pursue to facilitate child development and well-being (Weisner 2002). As the
anthropologist Thomas Weisner notes, families everywhere need to construct and sustain
family practices that foster survival, create
meaning, and ensure positive outcomes for
their children (2010). Yet not all family practices are equally eﬀective or achievable. Even
though families actively construct practices,
features in the surrounding environment are
also an inﬂuence. These inﬂuences include
material and institutional resources, health
and safety characteristics of the home and
community environment, expectations about
the division of household and economic labor,
informal and formal systems of support, and
sources of cultural inﬂuence. Accordingly,
family practices reﬂect a negotiation between
opportunities and constraints in the sur-

55

rounding environment and the cultural scripts
that families draw on to organize and give
meaning to everyday life and promote childhood well-being. The nexus of culture, environmental factors, and everyday family life is
constituted in the family niche (Weisner 2002,
2010). We extend an ecocultural conceptualization of the family niche to highlight the unique
circumstances facing mixed-status families. A
mixed-status family niche reﬂects both the
micro-environment families create as they balance their needs and the daily challenges associated with having an undocumented family
member.
Crucial to understanding the mixed-status
family niche is what we call a “cultural script
of silence.” As Genevieve Negrón- Gonzales
notes, “silence is a fundamental part of the
undocumented experience in this country . . .
[because] the potential consequences of discovery are so severe” (2014, 271). Drawing on
the notion of a cultural script of silence, we
analyze the ways in which citizen children interpret, manage, and navigate everyday life.
Citizen children’s daily lives are organized
around the very real possibility that their undocumented parents could one day be detained and deported. In this context, developmental tasks take on new meaning when a
knock on the family’s door has the potential
to signal a shift in the safety and integrity of
the family and the beginning of a terrifying
ordeal of parental detention and deportation.
Our purpose is to render visible the various
ways in which citizen children confront and
navigate the possibilities—and realities—of
parental deportation, in order to identify factors that potentially contribute to resilience in
the face of adversity. In doing so, we highlight
those factors that potentially distinguish citizen children from their peers in citizen families.
METHODS

Data analyzed were drawn from a mixedmethod, multisited binational study that
examined the psychosocial functioning of citizen children with undocumented Mexican
parents. Study sites included Austin, Texas;
Sacramento, California; and several locations

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undocumen ted immigr a n ts a nd their ex perience w ith illega lit y

Table 1. Demographic Characteristics of Citizen Children in Study Sample

Accompanied
Parent to Mexico
(n = 31)

Characteristic

M (SD)

Age

n
(percent)

11.1 (1.9)

Living in United
States with
Undocumented
Parent
(n = 34)

Remained in
United States
(n = 18)

M (SD)

n
(percent)

11.7 (1.8)

M (SD)

n
(percent)

11.6 (1.9)

Total
(n = 83)

M (SD)

n
(percent)

11.4 (1.9)

Gender (girl)

19 (61.3)

11 (61.1)

20 (58.8)

50 (60.2)

School enrollment (yes)

30 (96.8)

18 (100)

34 (100)

82 (98.8)

Living arrangement
Both parents
One parent
No parent

20 (64.5)
10 (32.3)
1 (3.2)

10 (55.6)
8 (44.4)
0 (0.0)

26 (76.5)
7 (20.6)
1 (2.9)

56 (67.5)
25 (30.1)
2 (2.4)

Source: Authors’ compilation.

throughout Mexico (Distrito Federal, Hidalgo,
Michoacán, Oaxaca, and Sinaloa). The sampling strategy entailed recruitment of three
groups of U.S. citizen children between eight
and fourteen years old with at least one undocumented Mexican parent: those who had
accompanied their deported parents to Mexico; who stayed in the United States with a parent or guardian after one or both parents underwent deportation proceedings, had been
deported to Mexico, or returned to the United
States following deportation to Mexico; and
whose undocumented parents had never been
detained by immigration enforcement. Potential participants were excluded if they did not
fall within the targeted age range or were living
in foster care or child welfare at the time of the
study. Additional exclusionary criteria included
a diagnosis of psychiatric disorder or cognitive
or developmental disability because these
present unique challenges that might shape
the well-being of citizen children.
Recruitment was carried out with the help
of staﬀ at local community agencies at each
site. After identifying potential participants
who met criteria for participation, agency staﬀ
discussed the study with parents. Parents who
expressed interest were referred to the research
team. All parents and children provided consent and assent for their participation, and in-

stitutional review board approval was granted
at each of the institutions and sites where research activities took place.
Participants

Table 1 presents the demographic characteristics of citizen children recruited for participation. Of the total eighty-three participants,
thirty-one accompanied their deported parent
or parents to Mexico, eighteen remained in the
United States after their parent or parents were
deported, and thirty-four were not directly affected by deportation at the time of the interview. Across participant subgroups, the majority were girls (60.2 percent). Nearly all
participants were enrolled in school and living
with both parents at the time interview.
Data Collection

In-depth interviews were conducted with citizen children to elicit their narratives about living with parents who were undocumented,
and, when applicable, to gather detailed accounts of their perceptions and experiences
with immigration enforcement and parental
deportation. All interviewers were bilingual,
and the majority were Mexican or Mexican
American women pursuing graduate degrees
in the social sciences and trained to conduct
qualitative interviews with children. Each in-

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�t he effects of immigr at ion en forcemen t

terviewer conducted the interview in the language the participant preferred; approximately
42 percent of the interviews were in Spanish.
To help reduce interviewer bias across multiple research sites, the research team constructed a semistructured interview guide to
provide a series of probes and prompts to facilitate deeper exploration of topics. Questions
were open-ended to capture how citizen children communicated, gave meaning to, and
constructed their experiences and perceptions
(Ochs and Capps 1996). The interview was conducted in a way that simulated a casual and
everyday conversation; to faciliate rapport, interviewers encouraged children to ask questions and provide feedback about the interview
process. Interviews began with a “grand tour”
question to explore participants’ perceptions
about home and family life, including descriptions of family activities and relationships, the
child’s roles and responsibilities within the
family, and social life outside the home (Spradley 1979). These questions set the stage for a
discussion about direct and indirect experiences with immigration enforcement or parental deportation. Interviewers focused on eliciting what the child remembered as meaningful,
placing particular emphasis on having children describe their perceptions, thoughts,
emotions, feelings, reﬂections, and interpretations to ascertain the psychosocial impact of
parental removal or having an undocumented
parent. If applicable, children were asked to
reﬂect on how their life had changed as a result
of the deportation.
Throughout qualitative data collection, several procedures were followed to monitor and
enhance the data quality. All interviews were
digitally recorded, transcribed, and analyzed
in the language of the interview to enhance
validity (Guest and MacQueen 2008). Interview
transcripts and notes were systematically reviewed, and a series of debrieﬁng meetings
were held with research team members to discuss the rigors of the data collection process
(Mack, Bunce, and Akumatey 2008).
Data Analysis

Transcripts were analyzed using a thematic approach to identify and describe participant perspectives (Guest, MacQueen, and Namey 2012).

57

To develop the coding framework, the ﬁrst author and a graduate research assistant independently read two interviews, recording their
initial interpretations of text. Emergent themes
were discussed in a team meeting, and a draft
of a codebook was developed from this discussion. Additional interviews were read to test
the utility of preliminary themes, with attention directed toward the emergence of new
themes. After eight interviews had been read,
themes in the codebook appeared to be well
established and a ﬁnal draft of the codebook
was produced. To test the utility of the codebook and establish intercoder reliability, four
interviews were uploaded into NVivo9, independently coded by the ﬁrst author and the
research assistant, and percent agreement was
calculated using the coding comparison module. Text that fell below a 75 percent threshold
was discussed during a team meeting, and the
codebook was revised as necessary (Miles and
Huberman 1994). Interviews were subsequently
coded using NVivo9, ﬁrst by the research assistant, and then by the ﬁrst author. This approach facilitated the transparency of the coders’ interpretations of the data by reviewing
and monitoring all coded text.
After data coding was completed, a framework matrix was generated in NVivo9. A framework matrix organizes data by themes (columns) and participants (rows). Each cell of the
matrix contained reduced data in the form of
direct quotes and summarized information
about the manifestation of a given theme in a
particular case. The matrix was then exported
and converted to a text document that contained the reduced and summarized information pertaining to each speciﬁc participant, or
case.
To protect against bias in the interpretation
of the cases, a panel of thirteen experts reviewed the data to compare the experiences of
citizen children across cognitive, emotional,
psychological, cultural, and socioeconomic dimensions. The panel included clinical psychologists and social workers in Mexico and the
United States, each of whom had expertise in
the mental health and cultural issues that Latino youth and their families experience. Each
panelist evaluated a random selection of
twenty cases to ensure that each case was re-

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undocumen ted immigr a n ts a nd their ex perience w ith illega lit y

Figure 1. Framework for Understanding Effects of Immigration Enforcement on Citizen Child
Outcomes
The Political Economy of U.S. Immigration Policy
Distribution of Resources (for example, housing, employment, schooling, physical
and mental healthcare, immigration resources, social support, community solidarity)

Mixed-Status Family Niche
Parent Characteristics

Immigration
Enforcement
Fear ● Arrest ● Detention
Deportation ● Separation
Relocation

Family Characteristics
• Structure
• Family roles and expectations
• Dynamics and relationships

• Personal roles and expectations
• Internal/psychological resources
• Gender
• Substance abuse, trauma
• Education, language
• Legal status

Cultural Script of Silence
• Communication
• Stressors
• Legal status
• Family and cultural history

Citizen Child Characteristics
• Personal roles and expectations
• Internal/psychological resources
• Gender, age, developmental level
• Substance abuse, trauma
• Education, language
• Legal status

Child Outcomes
Negative . . . . . . . . . . Positive

• Mental, emotional status
• Levels of stress
• Social/material well-being
• Sense of identity, belonging
• Academic performance

Source: Authors’ compilation.

viewed by multiple panelists. The panelists
were brought together, by telephone in Mexico
and in person in the United States, to discuss
the results of their analysis. Their discussions
were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed to develop a list of all the issues that citizen children
face and the contextual factors that exacerbated or ameliorated their direct and indirect
experiences with immigration enforcement.
The list originally contained 339 items, which
were organized into sixty-one categories, each
of which was linked to the interview data by
annotating which cases corresponded to a
given category. The research team then reviewed and discussed the arrangement of
items and speciﬁcation of categories and revised them accordingly. The list of categories
was ﬁnalized by consensus and a framework
developed to capture the diﬀerential eﬀects of
immigration enforcement on the well-being
of citizen children. The framework was revised
and ﬁnalized through an iterative team process
(see Sobo 2009).
R E S U LT S

In ﬁgure 1, we oﬀer a framework to describe
the varied circumstances facing citizen children to conceptualize the range of eﬀects immigration policies have on the well-being of

U.S. citizen children. Figure 1 illustrates the
interrelationships among ﬁve categories that
emerged as salient to the perspectives of citizen children: immigration enforcement, the
cultural script of silence, the distribution of
resources, the mixed-status family niche, and
child outcomes. Variations in child outcomes,
as experienced and narrated by citizen children, depended strongly on the particular processes and characteristics in place within speciﬁc contexts. We begin with a description of
the script of silence, followed by an exploration
of the ways in which citizen children drew on
the cultural script of silence to navigate the
various personal, social, and material ecologies
that characterized their lives in their eﬀorts to
cope with and adapt to situations beyond their
control. To contextualize the framework, we
present accounts of U.S. citizen children, in
their own words. All names are pseudonyms.
T H E C U LT U R A L S C R I P T O F S I LE N C E

As illustrated in ﬁgure 1, the cultural script of
silence emerges within a speciﬁc context: the
enforcement of U.S. immigration policies.
Given the potential for an act of immigration
enforcement to rupture family ties, most children perceived encounters with immigration
enforcement as the worst event that could be-

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�t he effects of immigr at ion en forcemen t

fall a family. Encounters could be indirect—
through the potential threat of parental deportation or knowing others who had been
deported—or direct—through the arrest, detention, and deportation of a parent. The condition of illegality, which rendered a parent’s
deportation possible, created and maintained
a context ripe for the development of a cultural
script of silence. Nearly every citizen child in
our study described the salience of silence
within their families. We call this phenomenon
the cultural script of silence, referencing a shared
script, or code, held among family members
that prohibited the discussion of legal status
both within and outside the household. The
script of silence shaped parents’ interactions
with their children and what they told their children about immigration, citizenship, and undocumented status. The script not only guided
the ways in which parents and children interacted, but also informed how parents taught or
modeled behaviors, and the ways in which parents communicated and provided support.
The importance of silence was ﬁrst learned
indirectly. As ﬁftteen-year-old Tommy, whose
father had been detained, explained, “I guess
it wasn’t really that I found out [about my parents’ status]. It was more like, like an idea you
settle into, and that you think is normal. And
like all the fears they have, you start to have,
too.” Like Tommy, most participants in our
sample stated that their parents rarely discussed the realities associated with being undocumented, though many children referenced an embodied comprehension of their
parents’ undocumented status as a result of
the various ways in which illegality organized
dynamics within the mixed-status family. Children came to know deﬁnitively about their parents’ status only through a speciﬁc event that
forced parents to explain. For example, when
one participant, Marianela, was eight years old,
she learned that both her parents were undocumented when her father became severely ill.
As she recalled the moment, “I told my mom
that we should take him to the hospital to see
what is going on with him. . . . And that’s when
my mom told me that we can’t take him to the
hospital. And that’s when I said, ‘He’s sick. We
need to take him to the hospital.’ And my mom
told me that my dad didn’t have any papers.”

59

Once citizen children learned that their parents were undocumented, they became keenly
aware of the ways in which a cultural script of
silence delineated family expectations for children’s interactions outside of the home. For
example, Tommy explained that his parents
provided him with explicit instructions to
monitor his behavior in public: “Whenever we
were around important people, you know like,
those people who deport other people, I have
to behave very well.”
In other families, citizen children were
strongly encouraged to remain silent about
their parents’ undocumented status. As nineyear-old Catarina explained, “Because my mom
doesn’t want me to tell anyone she says that
she could get in trouble if I talk to people about
it.” To be sure, participants were aware of the
pragmatic necessity for silence to protect their
parents from detection by immigration enforcement agencies. For example, fourteenyear-old Jessica recounted a time when her
friend’s mother had been deported after being
reported to legal authorities: “It happened to
my friend. That’s the only reason why her mom
went to Mexico. Because her neighbors
snitched them out that her mom didn’t have
papers. I worry if I tell someone, the same
thing is gonna happen as it happened to her.”
Despite the pragmatic need for discretion,
the script of silence contributed to experiences
of powerlessness among citizen children.
As Tommy explained, “we can’t really say our
mind or protest because we might get taken.
We have to, like, stay to the laws a lot more
than other people. Because they’ll judge us on
our skin and say, ‘Oh, you’re Mexican. Go to
your side.’”
In its most extreme manifestation, the cultural script of silence could set into motion a
series of emotional or family dynamics that
negatively aﬀected the well-being of citizen
children. The cultural script of silence shaped
children’s cognitive and emotional expression,
and some participants described conscious efforts to “not think” about their parents’ situation. Maya, nine years old, put it this way: “I
really don’t think about that. I just think fun
things.” For many participants, the potential
for a direct encounter with law enforcement
produced considerable fear, worry, and stress.

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undocumen ted immigr a n ts a nd their ex perience w ith illega lit y

For example, Maria, a ten-year-old who lived
with her undocumented parents and younger
citizen brother, explained, “I have papers, and
they don’t. They can’t really go places. They
could go to prison.” This awareness led to extreme fear of police oﬃcers. When Maria saw
a police car near her house, she would run inside, close the curtains, and cry profusely. It
was not until the police left the vicinity that
Maria would realize her parents were safe, and
only then would she come out of hiding. Her
fear of law enforcement stemmed from the
very real possibility that “maybe one day, they
can just take them. And then, me and my little
brother would have to go to foster homes. I
really don’t want that.”
Deliberate eﬀorts to silence thoughts and
emotions prevented children from having a
space, either with family or friends, to process
their fears, anxieties, and worries. The importance of silence within families sometimes
acted to weaken supportive bonds between
parents and children, and participants reported becoming distrustful of their parents
as a result. As eleven-year-old Anthony noted,
“They’re lying and all that. Like they knew they
did not have papers, but they didn’t tell me.”
Surprisingly, silence often continued even
after families experienced the worst possible
circumstance: the arrest, detention, and deportation of a parent. Children who experienced parental detention or deportation explained that they knew very little about the
immigration proceedings that led to the deportation of their parents. For example, Anthony did not understand why his father
“went” to Mexico. Although his father had
been deported eight months prior to the interview, he reported that he knew “only that
my dad was going to Mexico. [My mom] didn’t
want to talk about it.” Similarly, for elevenyear-old Ernesto, the events resulting in his
father’s deportation were unclear. Ernesto explained that he woke up one day to learn that
his father had been “taken” to Mexico. As he
described it, “I just woke up and asked mom
what happened. And she said they took him
back to Mexico. He was somewhere, and they
sent him to Mexico. I think he did something
bad . . . I don’t know.”
Some participants could vividly recall the

circumstances surrounding parental deportation because they witnessed directly the arrest
and detention of their undocumented parent.
For example, Christina was twelve years old
when her mother was arrested. According to
Christina, who was fourteen at the time of the
interview, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents arrived at Christina’s house
early one morning:
Like ﬁve in the morning. They just came . . .
knocking on the door. And like, my mom, she
was really scared. And my dad was like, “pack
your stuﬀ! And let’s leave.” And [my mom]
looked outside the window, and the house
was surrounded. It was surrounded by like
ICE people. And I heard, like, loud knocking.
And like, I just got up . . . and I was like,
“what’s going on?” Because there were, like,
a lot of people on the porch. Everywhere. I
was, like, super scared . . . . And like, they
took her. And she gave me the last hug, and
um . . . She walked out of the door. And I was
like, “You can’t leave us!” [Christina’s voice
cracks, and she starts to cry quietly] So . . .
me seeing my mom go away, it was very hard
for me.

Christina recounted how she retreated into
herself following her mother’s arrest. As she
explained, “I quit my grades, and with, like,
everything.” Christina’s eventual healing occurred only after she found a space to vocalize
her experience. Still, when Christina reﬂected
on that horrible night, she actively wished that
she could erase, not only her mother’s arrest,
but also her presence during it: “If I could
change anything in my life, I would probably
change that. I would wish not to be there whenever they took my mom. I wish I would never
see that.”
Not a single participant in our study described having a plan in place that would help
guide and assist children about what to do in
the event that a parent was arrested and detained. In this way, the cultural script of silence
seemed to thwart the implementation of emergency plans for children and their families. As
a result, participants described intense emotional experiences during the arrest and detention of a parent, and in turn, active eﬀorts to

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�t he effects of immigr at ion en forcemen t

mute the painful memories associated with
such experiences. For example, thirteen-yearold Guillermo described the arrest and detention of his father this way: “Like sometimes it
comes to my mind, but mostly I don’t think
about that. I don’t know. When I’m about to
go to sleep, it just comes up.” The middles of
the night, when he would wake from nightmares about his father, were some of the bleakest times for Guillermo.
It is important that the cultural script of silence was not static or unchanging in its manifestation. The salience of the script, both in
guiding family dynamics and the extent to
which it aﬀected the well-being of citizen children, depended on the quality of resources
available to children and their families. Although the script of silence operated as a kind
of mediating force that shaped speciﬁc patterns of emotions, thoughts, behaviors, and
dynamics within the mixed-status family, the
well-being of citizen children was more than
the simple presence or absence of a cultural
script. Rather, well-being was also shaped by
the availability and distribution of and access
to social and material resources.
DISTRIBUTION OF RESOURCES

All of the participants in our study came to
feel, experience, and understand the sociopolitical condition of illegality via their encounters with public institutions and broader community settings. Health care, employment,
housing, neighborhood violence, and discrimination emerged as salient nodes around
which citizen children came to understand the
meaning of their parents’ undocumented status, the political and economic constraints associated with lack of citizenship, and their
own location within the constellation of discourses surrounding perceptions of individuals deemed illegal. The political and economic
consequences of illegality reverberated across
families of mixed-status through everyday
experiences. Varied assemblages of legal statuses within and across families—citizen,
authorized, undocumented—shaped the everyday experiences of citizen children diﬀerently, and the distribution of resources was
often the driving force behind these diﬀerential experiences. As ﬁgure 1 illustrates, access

61

to ﬁnancial, education, extracurricular, mental
health, legal, and immigration-related resources often translated to the diﬀerences
between suﬀering, on the one hand, and resiliency, on the other.
In mixed-status families with one authorized or citizen parent, citizen children described less acute ﬁnancial and housing struggles. In this way, legal status operated as a
deﬁnitive resource. Nevertheless, the condition
of illegality reverberated across the household
even when only one parent was undocumented.
In these cases, issues related to the institutional invisibility of the undocumented parent
loomed large. For example, Cecilia, the tenyear-old daughter of an undocumented mother
and citizen father, recounted that “the school
doesn’t know my mom’s name. She can’t sign
our paperwork, and they only see my dad.” Her
mother’s undocumented status altered the domestic organization of responsibilities within
the household, and her father was charged
with acting as both mother and father in the
public sphere.
Among citizen children whose parents were
detained, chronic experiences of political and
economic marginalization sometimes shaped
family decisions to accept deportation. In the
case of Jennyfer, a fourteen-year-old who lived
with her undocumented grandmother and undocumented mother, her mother became
gravely ill. Her mother had been diagnosed
with hepatitis C, which Jennyfer thought had
been the result of a blood transfusion her
mother received during childbirth. The family
considered returning to Mexico to enable her
mother to receive health care, but soon after
this discussion, Jennyfer’s grandmother was
arrested and detained. Given the status of the
mother’s health, the grandmother accepted deportation so that the mother could receive the
care she needed in Mexico. Although Jennyfer
felt “sad” to leave the United States, she noted,
“I would prefer that we moved here so that my
mother could get better rather than stay there
and watch her get worse.” For Jennyfer and her
family, barriers to accessing health care inﬂuenced the conditions under which they would
“accept” deportation. In the end, Jennifyer decided that she would do whatever it would take
to stay close to her mother.

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Many participants who relocated to Mexico
to reunite with their deported parents described how they initially missed the conveniences and material abundance associated
with life in the United States, such as shopping
at big box stores. However, these experiences
gave way to more profound sensations of loss
about their potential futures and resources. As
twelve-year-old Clarissa explained, “If I stay
here [in Mexico] I won’t have the chance to
have any kind of future.” Participants described Mexico as a place with limited educational and employment opportunity. Twelveyear- old Luciana narrated a particularly
diﬃcult adjustment to the school setting in
Mexico. She described repeatedly asking for
help in her studies, but her teachers did not
respond to her requests. They would tell her
they were “too bored” by her questions. As a
result, she lost any desire to do well in school:
“I see that my grades have dropped a lot because I’m like, why would I try if no matter
what I do, the teachers aren’t even going to notice?”
Cases such as these reveal the various ways
in which access to resources might have contributed to diﬀerent outcomes for children in
our study. Although legal status excluded many
families from accessing resources, such as safe
employment and healthcare, key players within
institutional and family settings ﬁgured prominently in facilitating participants’ access to
what limited resources were available. For example, soon after the arrest and detention of
Christina’s mother, described above, her father
was detained and deported. Although her
mother was eventually released, Christina and
her siblings experienced major disruptions in
terms of housing and access to material resources. Desolate, Christina broke the script of
silence and reached out to her school counselor: “I told my counselor that we really
needed help ’cause, like, it was more than ten
people living at my aunt’s house. And she
didn’t have enough money for us. So [my counselor] got most of the teachers, they donated
food and clothes. I remember coming home
from school with a lot of bags full of like food
and diapers and other stuﬀ.” For Christina and
members of her family, the school staﬀ provided material resources needed to sustain

family life. Moreover, the counselor created a
supportive environment for Christina to process her emotional reactions to her father’s deportation.
For other citizen children, extended kin
emerged as key brokers to accessing resources.
Karla, twelve years old, described the signiﬁcance of extended kin in shaping her experience of reuniting with her family in Mexico
following her father’s deportation. Her grandfather helped ease the transition economically
by providing Karla’s family with a house in
Mexico and giving her father a job working in
his painting business. On occasion, Karla’s
grandfather would supplement the family’s income when they needed the extra money. With
this additional money, Karla was able to maintain her involvement in sports, which helped
to provide continuity between her former life
in the United States and her new life in Mexico.
Karla had participated in club boxing in the
United States and was able to join a boxing
gym in Mexico. During the interview, Karla
noted excitedly that she was anticipating her
ﬁrst boxing match. She had been training for
“a long, long time. They put me up against a
ninth grader, and I am barely in sixth grade.
But she’s tiny! And I’ve been training for this
. . . for the day that I’ll ﬁght.”
The cases of Christina and Karla reveal how
access to resources was shaped by relationships between citizen children and other individuals within their social network. In this way,
social support functioned as a critical resource,
particularly when trusted family and friends
constructed a space to dismantle the cultural
script of silence. Fourteen-year-old Elena, for
example, described how she became withdrawn and uncommunicative on learning that
her father had been detained. In response, her
mother reached out to her and enrolled her in
dance class to provide an outlet for her “frustration.” In this way, Elena’s mother provided
support by ﬁnding a space in which Elena
could process her emotions. In addition to
family, trusted peers operated as a strong system of social support, buﬀering against the
trauma associated with immigration enforcement by breaching the script of silence. Elena
described school as a kind of second family:
“We all know each other. We’ve been knowing

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�t he effects of immigr at ion en forcemen t

each other since ﬁfth grade. So we already have
really strong connections because we’ve been
growing and our school, they’re like, team and
family. So all of us are like our family.” Close
friendships at school created spaces of perceived safety in which citizen children could
divulge their worst fears, worries, and anxieties. As Elena noted,
There is this girl. She is my best friend, and
we have known each other since the second
grade. And I know that her parents don’t
have any papers too, so I mostly tell her everything about my life. Because, um, she told
me everything about her life, and how she
feels scared that she could lose her parents
if they are ever sent to Mexico. So we tell each
other everything, and we try to help each
other out.

School enabled citizen children like Elena
to foster relationships based on their shared
experiences. Moreover, the school administration facilitated classroom curricula designed
to break the script of silence and raise awareness about immigration:
See, in our school, like in our history class
they teach us about diﬀerent topics and one
of the topics has been, um, immigration. We
can connect a lot to that since our school is
99.9 percent Hispanics. We already know
most of the things so sometimes, like sometimes, it’s an emotional class where we stay
strong. So, it’s kind of good to know something else that could help you.

Unfortunately, Elena’s experience was rare.
Her story reveals the ways in which her links
to institutional resources and supportive relationships contributed to her well-being during
her father’s detention. Yet, the constellation of
individual and family characteristics within
her mixed-status family niche also facilitated
positive outcomes as well. For example, Elena’s
parents had divorced many years before her
father was detained. Although her family often
spent time together in activities that included
both her parents, such as family dinner, Elena
did not live with her father. This is not to say
that the detention of Elena’s father was no less

63

distressing to her, but rather that her wellbeing was shaped by the complex interaction
of various factors, including those within the
mixed-status family niche.
T H E M I X E D - S TAT U S FA M I LY N I C H E

Figure 1 illustrates the elements that make up
the micro-setting of daily life in mixed-status
families, or the mixed-status family niche. The
niche represents the dynamic interplay between characteristics and behaviors at the individual and family level. Parent characteristics
and family cohesion were cited as key to the
capacity for the family to act as a system of social support and foster well-being.
Participants noted that their well-being was
deeply tied to their parents’ vulnerabilities and
strengths, and thus that parental well-being
held the potential to be a source of comfort or
of stress for citizen children. Among participants, family histories of substance abuse or
trauma were perceived as particularly stressful,
capable of exacerbating the negative eﬀects of
immigration enforcement experiences. For example, Marisa, a thirteen-year-old who had reunited with her parents in Mexico after their
deportation, noted that her father’s history of
substance abuse overshadowed her own adjustment to living in a new environment.
Marisa had hoped that in reuniting with her
parents in Mexico she would recover the parental love and support that she needed and
desired. Yet, her relationship with her father
was strained, and she described him as distant
and uncommunicative. As she explained,
“With my father taking drugs, he can’t work
and he spends a lot [on drugs]. And my mom
has to work to be able to keep up the house.
He has promised us so many times, he has
sworn to us, that he is going to quit, but he
never does. Sometimes he just spends the day
in the house sleeping.”
In reuniting with her family in Mexico,
Marisa was forced to renegotiate her expectations for parental care. Her father’s substance
abuse aﬀected his capacity to act as an engaged
father and family member, but also produced
ﬁnancial strain. In turn, Marissa’s mother
worked extended hours and was rarely home.
Marissa noted that the family did not agree
about the reorganization of family life in Mex-

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undocumen ted immigr a n ts a nd their ex perience w ith illega lit y

ico, which generated signiﬁcant family conﬂict.
In contrast, personal strengths were perceived as diminishing the negative eﬀects or
stressors that stemmed from immigration enforcement. For example, Marco, a fourteenyear-old boy, described the importance of a
strong work ethic, which was instilled in him
by his father. He noted that his father “wants
to teach me how to work so I can get our family a better future. I work. I ﬁnd anything I can
do. I help my mom.” Marco’s narrative reﬂected the way in which he was becoming socialized to become the patriarch of the family,
a process that had been accelerated by the fact
that his father was facing deportation. Marco
sometimes struggled with his newfound responsibilities but nevertheless accepted them.
He explained:
I don’t really have my childhood anymore. I
don’t get to play around anymore. I always
have to be there. I have to be strong for my
brothers. I guess I miss when I was smaller
and everything being so innocent for me. The
world just being there as a playground for
me. A place for me to have fun. Now it’s kind
of more like a . . . How would you call it?
Um . . . obstacle ground. With obstacles. Obstacles I have to go through. I don’t like it,
but there’s nothing I can do to take it oﬀ of
me. I have to be there. It’s my responsibility,
and I have to hold it up, and I have to be
there.

For Marco, like many citizen children, age
and gender shaped the ways that parents organized household roles and responsibilities.
The eﬀects of immigration policies and practices often made it diﬃcult for families to build
consistent routines for children, which frequently resulted in confusion or resentment
about their roles and responsibilities within
the household. This was particularly the case
among older girls who reunited with their families in Mexico. For example, in the case of
ﬁfteen-year-old Melina, she felt that the task of
sibling and domestic care detracted from her
personal motivation to focus on her education.
Both her parents were required to work long

hours outside of the household, and they
charged Melina with caring for the household.
As she explained, “[In the United States], I
didn’t have to clean, or work in the kitchen, or
anything. It was pure studying because that is
what I spent my time doing. But here, no, here
it is diﬀerent. Here, you spend all your time
cleaning the house, taking care of your siblings. Now it’s no longer about studying.”
Reﬂecting on the change in routines in Mexico, Melina noted that she felt resentful toward
her new responsibilities in the household. She
said that she often took it out on her younger
siblings by ignoring them. As her case illustrates, the ways that participants interpreted
sudden changes in their routines and responsibilities could produce resentment, frustration, and angst, particularly when new household practices were perceived as thwarting
their individual expectations and needs. In
contrast, older boys and younger girls in our
sample sometimes embraced the opportunity
to contribute to the household. Thus, consensus among family members regarding the gendered and age-based organization of household responsibilities contributed to supportive
interactions, whereas conﬂict between personal and family expectations could lead to
tension. Individual characteristics and behaviors of children and parents were perceived as
shaping the quality of family dynamics, yet
many participants were cognizant of the ways
in which family dynamics were singularly constrained by the broader political economy of
U.S. immigration policy. This recognition led
numerous citizen children to declare, “Things
would be better in my family if only my parents
had papers.”
C H I LD O U TC O M E S

Figure 1 illustrates how, within the context of
the political economy of U.S. immigration policy and encounters with enforcement agencies,
the distribution of resources, the arrangement
of factors in the mixed-status family niche, and
the cultural script of silence interact to shape
outcomes for citizen children. A range of effects on well-being is suggested, from negative
to positive in terms of social and material wellbeing, the mental and emotional status of chil-

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�t he effects of immigr at ion en forcemen t

dren, levels of stress, sense of identity and belonging, and academic performance. In this
regard, an important theme in our research is
that no single and deﬁnitive proﬁle encapsulates the experiences of citizen children in
mixed-status families. As illustrated in ﬁgure
1, the eﬀects of immigration encounters on the
well-being of citizen children depend heavily
on many factors, reﬂecting the combined and
continued eﬀects associated with the political
economy of U.S. immigration policy, the resources available to children and their families, the organization of the mixed-status family niche, and the cultural scripts that
individuals draw on to navigate daily life.
Across participants, well-being was experienced diﬀerently depending on family circumstances. Without legal status, wage earners
were subject to the realities of participating in
an unskilled and informal labor market. As a
result, most youth hoped their parents could
get papers one day so that they would be able
to ﬁnd more satisfying—and better paying—
work. As Jose, thirteen years old, noted, if his
parents had papers, “they could be here and
be comfortable. I just know that my dad says
that he wants the papers because he wants a
better job.”
Additionally, some participants described
confusion about their national, ethnic, and legal identities. Having an undocumented parent imposed boundaries of exclusion within
school and community settings, even among
those who had never experienced parental deportation. For example, twelve-year-old Anna
recalled, “a lot of people are very racist at my
school. And a lot of them say, ‘Go back where
you came from.’” Experiences of discrimination had a disempowering eﬀect on children’s
understandings of their social location within
these broader settings. As fourteen-year-old
David explained, “I don’t feel like other kids in
school. I feel kind of like an outlaw.” For youth
who experienced parental deportation, some
participants described not knowing where they
belonged. Ten-year-old Daniel, who accompanied his deported father to Mexico, described
“being between two worlds. I have family here
and family over there, in both places. I’m like
in the middle of Mexico and the U.S.”

65

The potential threats to well-being could
bring heightened stress and emotional and
mental distress. Fear and worries about their
parents’ status, or experiences of parental deportation, made it diﬃcult for youth to engage
actively in daily life. One eleven year old,
Emma, recounted that every time she left her
mother’s side, even at school, she became increasingly nervous that something would happen to her mother and she would not be nearby
to help: “It’s just worrying. Like [if I] leave her
side. Like not be there to support her.” In another case, Manny, who was fourteen years old,
began to experience intense headaches and
nausea when his father was deported to Mexico. At the time, he was living with his mother,
a U.S. citizen, and younger brother. As he described the experience, “It was nerves. Pure
nerves. I was scared that something would happen to my mom. Like, someone would hurt her
or kidnap her, or something like that, because
my dad wasn’t there.” As time passed, his
symptoms worsened, and he began to vomit at
school, almost daily. In response, the school
sent him home because, as he said, “I couldn’t
be without my mom. It scared me.” Finally, his
mother took him to a psychologist, who recommended that the family reunite for Manny’s
emotional well-being. The family heeded the
psychologist’s advice and moved to Mexico to
rejoin Manny’s father, whereupon Manny’s
symptoms disappeared.
In our sample, Manny was not alone in his
experience of intense distress. Nearly 30 percent of participants in the study described
symptoms often associated with anxiety and
depression, including intense bouts of crying,
loss of interest in activities, diﬃculties sleeping, loss of appetite, feelings of fear, and suicidal thoughts. Although intense suﬀering was
experienced across our sample, citizen children
who were in the midst of parental deportation
processes reported suﬀering more frequently
than children in other groups. Among children
who accompanied their deported parents to
Mexico, the majority described diﬃculties adjusting to the diﬀerent ecocultural environment, and these diﬃculties could be experienced more intensely depending on the
constellation of factors outlined in ﬁgure 1.

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�66

undocumen ted immigr a n ts a nd their ex perience w ith illega lit y

Such experiences were not universal, however, as described in many of the cases, and
some citizen children exhibited extraordinary
resilience in the face of the many adversities
they confronted. Unfortunately, narratives of
well-being were described with less frequency
across all groups. This was especially so among
citizen children experiencing parental separation due to detention and deportation at the
time of the interview: no child in this group
reported doing well. In comparison, only seven
citizen children whose parents had never been
deported and only six who accompanied their
parents to Mexico described feeling safe, emotionally secure, and socially connected. Among
these children, access to resources to nurture
well-being appeared to be a key leverage point
in shaping how participants were able to manage their everyday lives. The most fundamental
resource, at least from the perspective of citizen children across groups, was family cohesion. As Karla eloquently described it after her
family reuniﬁcation in Mexico,
Really, I am happy there [in the United
States], and I am happy here [in Mexico]. I am
happy as long as I have my parents with me.
If I am separated from one of them, I don’t
know what to do. It hurts. I can’t be as happy
as I would if I lived with both of them. I have
always lived with both of them.
DISCUSSION

In this paper, we describe a framework for conceptualizing the eﬀects of immigration enforcement on the well-being of citizen children
living with their undocumented Mexican parents. The framework illustrates the complex
multidimensional, and often multidirectional,
factors citizen children vulnerable to or directly facing parental deportation experience.
Our ﬁndings suggest that the everyday realities
facing citizen children—and the ways in which
these realities shape well-being—cannot be reduced to simple explanations. Thus, 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.

Participants in our study described wellbeing in terms of a dynamic relationship between personal qualities and the social context
surrounding them. In this conﬁguration, the
presence or absence of parents emerged as a
signiﬁcant theme. Forced family separations
were perceived to be the worst stressor facing
participants in our sample. Among citizen
children without experiences of parental deportation, the potential for a forced separation
was never far from their minds. Indeed, the
“deportability” of their parents was described
overwhelmingly as a major cause for emotional distress (De Genova 2002). For citizen
children facing parental deportation, families
were forced to confront whether they should
separate so that children could remain in their
citizen country or relocate to Mexico to keep
the family together. In deciding, citizen children had to evaluate the potential emotional,
social, and material costs, and brace themselves for the aftermath.
The adverse circumstances citizen children
faced were not limited to forced family separations and reﬂected the broader consequences
associated with the political economy of U.S.
immigration policy. Participants described the
varied ﬁnancial and emotional costs associated
with illegality, supporting research that describes the ways in which citizen children suffer the consequences of their parents’ undocumented status (Chavez et al. 1997; Guendelman
et al. 2006; Kersey, Geppert, and Cutts 2007;
Perreira and Ornelas 2011). Our results reveal
how the personal strengths of parents and children had the potential to shield children from
the negative eﬀects of stressors that stemmed
from indirect and direct encounters with immigration enforcement. Strengths were often
entwined with the availability of resources that
could enhance well-being. Access to ﬁnancial,
educational, extracurricular, mental health, legal, and immigration-related resources buttressed individual strengths and buﬀered
against traumatic experiences related to immigration enforcement and forced family separations. Extended kin and individuals in school
and religious institutions emerged as supportive networks that facilitated access to those resources that were important to well-being. Social connection, however, was not without its

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�t he effects of immigr at ion en forcemen t

risks.1 A strong social network was key to the
facilitation of well-being among citizen children, but its loss could exacerbate the emotional costs of relocation to Mexico after parental deportation.
In our ﬁndings, we point to the cultural
script of silence as an additional risk factor
that is unique to the experience of mixedstatus families. The presence and pragmatics
of cultural silence have been well documented
among families and communities of undocumented individuals (De Genova 2002, 2009;
Fassin 2001; Menjívar and Kanstroom, 2014).
Yet, as Joanna Dreby convincingly argues, U.S.
immigration policies have “a profound impact
on children in Mexican families regardless of
the parents’ or children’s legal status or the
family’s actual involvement with the Department of Homeland Security” (2012, 843). The
consequences of illegality, and the cultural logics of silence, extend beyond the boundaries
of legal status to aﬀect the lives of citizen children as well (Zayas 2015; Zayas and Bradlee
2015), and our ﬁndings point to the diﬀerent
ways in which silence operates. Although all
participants knew that their parents were undocumented, the cultural script of silence
manifested through other processes that encouraged youth to be silent about their experiences of suﬀering with kin, their peers, and
even themselves.2 Arguably, silencing not only
leads to emotional and mental distress, but
also fractures citizen children’s understanding
of their place in the world (Fivush 2010). Without a community to safely break the code of
silence, citizen children—and their undocumented peers—must risk the potential integrity of their families should they choose to
voice their experiences. It is for this reason that
any resistance to the cultural script of silence
will be found in the most closed, trusted, and
intimate spaces. The experiences of immigrant
families will remain, for the most part, hidden,
camouﬂaged, and unspoken. Continued re-

67

search on the eﬀects of silence on well-being
is warranted, especially comparative research
that examines the diﬀerential experiences of
citizen children and the spectrums of silence.
The categories and factors illustrated in ﬁgure 1 are derived from a rigorous approach to
qualitative data analysis. Nevertheless, additional research is warranted to test our model
and to determine the extent to which certain
factors aﬀect citizen children in immigrant
families of diﬀerent national origin. Additionally, we did not examine the unique circumstances of children living with psychiatric, cognitive, or developmental disability. Living with
disability poses unique opportunities and challenges for families, which might distinguish
their experiences as citizen children living in
mixed-status families (Farrell and Krahn 2014).
Research is still needed that examines the intersections of disability and legal status. Our
framework opens the door for a critical discussion of the diﬀerent factors that aﬀect citizen
children, and it is our hope that subsequent
revisions are made to the framework based on
the results of additional research. Of particular
importance is the need to investigate how resources available in citizen children’s local environment shape the degree to which cultural
scripts, such as the script for silence, and individual coping mechanisms become helpful
or harmful.
Our ﬁndings provide opportunities to inﬂuence immigration enforcement policies and
practices. Experiences of family cohesion and
dissolution hold particular relevance for this
population, signifying potential avenues to reorganize programs and policies to enhance the
well-being of citizen children. For example, the
signiﬁcance of the theme of family separation
suggests the need to reconsider detention procedures that thwart family togetherness. Current practices that detain parents in locations
that are geographically distant from family
households pose serious risks to the emotional

1. Thanks to an anonymous reviewer for the suggestion regarding this point.
2. Our participants were aware of their parents’ legal status, and this distinguishes our results from other research that reveals that many children, especially those who are undocumented, remain unaware of their families’ legal status until they attend college (Gonzales 2011). This points to the diversity of experiences within
immigrant families, both in terms of how children become aware of legal status differences and the experiences
that such knowledge engenders.

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�68

undocumen ted immigr a n ts a nd their ex perience w ith illega lit y

well-being of citizen children (Zayas 2015). In
the end, our results point to many resources
that were perceived as mattering most. It is our
hope, in oﬀering a comprehensive account of
the eﬀects of immigration enforcement, that
the framework can be used to modify leverage
points that oﬀer the potential for change in
micro and macro settings in ways that appreciate the diversity of citizen children’s experiences.

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              <text>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.</text>
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