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Heewon Jang; Thalia Tom – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2024
The Hispanic population has emerged as a significant policy interest in U.S. rural communities, due to their increasing presence since the 1990s and contributions to the rural economy. This study describes trends in the social and educational resources available to rural Hispanic children over three decades, considering a new definition of…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Children, Educational Resources, Rural Areas
UnidosUS, 2020
In its 2019 report, "Beyond the Border: Family Separation in the Trump Era" (see ED603926), UnidosUS demonstrates how the current trajectory of the nation's immigration policies is threatening the future of an entire generation of American children. Today, 80% of Latinos are U.S. citizens and half of those remaining are legal permanent…
Descriptors: Immigration, Hispanic Americans, Children, Public Policy
UnidosUS, 2020
In its 2019 report, "Beyond the Border: Family Separation in the Trump Era" (see ED603926), UnidosUS demonstrates how the current trajectory of the nation's immigration policies is threatening the future of an entire generation of American children. Today, 80% of Latinos are U.S. citizens and half of those remaining are legal permanent…
Descriptors: Immigration, Hispanic Americans, Children, Public Policy
UnidosUS, 2020
In its 2019 report, "Beyond the Border: Family Separation in the Trump Era" (see ED603926), UnidosUS demonstrates how the current trajectory of the nation's immigration policies is threatening the future of an entire generation of American children. Today, 80% of Latinos are U.S. citizens and half of those remaining are legal permanent…
Descriptors: Immigration, Hispanic Americans, Children, Public Policy
UnidosUS, 2020
In its 2019 report, "Beyond the Border: Family Separation in the Trump Era" (see ED603926), UnidosUS demonstrates how the current trajectory of the nation's immigration policies is threatening the future of an entire generation of American children. Today, 80% of Latinos are U.S. citizens and half of those remaining are legal permanent…
Descriptors: Immigration, Hispanic Americans, Children, Public Policy
Chávez, Nicole; Setty, Suma; Liu, Hannah; Cervantes, Wendy – Center for Law and Social Policy, Inc. (CLASP), 2023
Interior immigration enforcement continues to have a significant impact on children in mixed-status families. Numerous studies have demonstrated the association between the detention and deportation of parents-- including the threat of these actions--and negative outcomes for children and their families. These include developmental concerns,…
Descriptors: Immigration, Law Enforcement, Children, Institutionalized Persons
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Treviño, Luis Enrique Juárez; García, José; Bybee, Eric Ruíz – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2017
This article, based on the "testimonio" of a Latino DACAmented teacher, underscores the impacts and benefits of immigration policies for individuals and their communities. Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) has benefitted about 750,000 people; most have used the benefits to pursue higher education and to enter public service…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Minority Group Teachers, Immigration, Public Policy
UnidosUS, 2020
In its 2019 report, "Beyond the Border: Family Separation in the Trump Era," UnidosUS demonstrates how the current trajectory of the nation's immigration policies is threatening the future of an entire generation of American children. This issue brief on Illinois is part of a series that builds on this analysis by exploring the stakes at…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Immigration, Hispanic Americans, Children
Barajas-Gonzalez, R. Gabriela; Ayón, Cecilia; Torres, Franco – Society for Research in Child Development, 2018
Heeding the call put out by the "New England Journal of Medicine" (2017), we utilize an ecological-transactional model as a conceptual framework for understanding existing literature and for guiding future research on immigration enforcement threat and Latino child development. Using the World Health Organization's definition of…
Descriptors: Violence, Hispanic Americans, Child Development, Immigration
Guevara, Carlos – UnidosUS, 2019
Indiscriminate enforcement and worksite raids, a revival of anti-immigrant activity at the state level, and the undermining of our legal immigration system are all putting nearly 6 million U.S. citizen children at risk of separation from their families. And many of these children are Latino. Beyond the "Border: Family Separation in the Trump…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Law Enforcement, Immigration, Family Relationship
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Pérez Huber, Lindsay – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2015
Utilizing a Latina/o Critical Theory framework (LatCrit), I examine the narratives that emerged within national newsprint media coverage of DREAMers and Central American unaccompanied children. Data included 268 newspaper articles published during periods of heightened national media attention about DREAMers (96 articles) and Central American…
Descriptors: Children, Immigrants, Hispanic Americans, Critical Theory
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Varela, R. Enrique; Hensley-Maloney, Lauren – Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 2009
This article reviews the literature on how culture influences anxiety in Latino youth. First, a review of cross-cultural variations in prevalence and measurement is presented. Then, the article focuses on how culture impacts the meaning and expression of anxiety. Specifically, we discuss the meaning and expression of anxiety, the impact of culture…
Descriptors: Children, Cultural Differences, Cognitive Processes, Anxiety
Jensen, Bryant T. – Online Submission, 2007
Drawing from Brofenbrenner's multilevel, bioecological model of development, this paper presents a framework that charts environmental processes which generate or buffer acculturative stress and, therefore, mediate the impact of immigration on psychological well-being. Empirical research shows that Mexican immigrants, on the whole, fare better…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigration, Immigrants, Psychopathology
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Frabutt, James M. – Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice, 2006
One in five youth in the United States is a child of an immigrant and children of immigrants are the most rapidly growing segment of the U.S. population under age 18. Consequently, there is a great need to better understand the psychosocial impact of immigration on children's mental health and adjustment. It is striking, however, that research on…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Mental Health, Immigration, Acculturation
Portes, Alejandro, Ed. – 1996
This book compiles findings on the children of recent immigrants to the United States. The dearth of accessible census data and the tendency for school records and scholarly surveys to compress second-generation youth into a classificatory scheme that obliterates their history have obscured a major phenomenon in U.S. society--a rapidly growing…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Adolescents, Asian Americans