“It felt like hitting rock bottom”: A qualitative exploration of the mental health impacts of immigration enforcement and discrimination on US-citizen, Mexican children

Latino immigrant families in the United States were disproportionately affected by intensified interior immigration enforcement under the Trump administration. US-citizen children are victimized by policies targeting their immigrant parents; research is sparse regarding how these polices affect chil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Latino studies 2023-09, Vol.21 (3), p.323-347
Hauptverfasser: Lieberman, Jamile Tellez, Valdez, Carmen R., Pintor, Jessie Kemmick, Weisz, Philippe, Carroll-Scott, Amy, Wagner, Kevin, Martinez-Donate, Ana P.
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 323
container_title Latino studies
container_volume 21
creator Lieberman, Jamile Tellez
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Wagner, Kevin
Martinez-Donate, Ana P.
description Latino immigrant families in the United States were disproportionately affected by intensified interior immigration enforcement under the Trump administration. US-citizen children are victimized by policies targeting their immigrant parents; research is sparse regarding how these polices affect children who experience parental deportation and children who are at risk for parental deportation. Additionally, anti-immigrant rhetoric can result in increased discrimination that also threatens children’s psychological health. This qualitative study (N = 22) explores children’s lived experiences of discrimination, parental deportation or threat of parental deportation, and perceived impacts on mental health. Interviews conducted from 2019 to 2020 revealed that children who are directly affected by or at risk for parental deportation experience detrimental impacts to their psychological well-being. Children experience discrimination as Latinos and children of immigrants, which is also detrimental to their mental/emotional health. Incorporating children’s perspectives is critical to informing public health interventions. Findings demonstrate the need for family-friendly immigration reform.
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source Sociological Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects At risk populations
Children
Citizens
Cultural and Media Studies
Cultural Studies
Deportation
Discrimination
Emotions
Enforcement
Ethnicity Studies
Experience
Families & family life
Health education
Hispanic Americans
Immigrants
Immigration
Immigration policy
Latin American cultural groups
Literature
Mental health
Mexican Americans
Migration
Original
Original Article
Parents & parenting
Postcolonial/World Literature
Psychological well being
Public health
Qualitative research
Regional and Cultural Studies
Rhetoric
Well being
title “It felt like hitting rock bottom”: A qualitative exploration of the mental health impacts of immigration enforcement and discrimination on US-citizen, Mexican children
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