How Does Immigration Affect Families

Words: 1535
Pages: 7

How Immigration Affects Families

Heylin J. Valdez

Montclair State University

How Immigration Affects Families

Step by Step Instructions to Find the Article Online

Step one: Open an internet browser.

Step two: Go to the Montclair State University website, (www.montclair.edu)

Step three: Click on the menu bar, click "LIBRARY" on the Toolbar Links.

Step four: Click on Find Articles & More

Step five: Enter keys words in the search box "Families and immigration".

Step six: Click off the boxes labeled "Full Text" and "Peer Reviewed".

Step seven: Click search button

Step eight: On the left-hand open the "Refine Results" toolbox

Step nine: Change "Publication Date" click
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13-15

Results: pg. 15- 35

Discussion/Conclusion: pg. 35-39

References/footnotes: pg. 1- 6, 8-18, 20-21, 26, 28, 31-2, 35-38

#'s 4 & 5

Research on immigrant families has been a current topic in Family Studies. The complications that immigrant families face today lead to the ongoing hardships of thousands of developing families in the United States. Immigration research has been conducted on individual analysis, and not entirely based on how deportation effects mixed-status families. The article, "Understanding Secondary Immigration Enforcement: Immigrant Youth and Family Separation in a Border County" conducts a study on Mexican immigrant families. This study captures the complex and harsh trade-offs that immigration laws create for mix-status families.

The study researches thirty-eight individuals, who have been separated from their parents due to immigration reform. They were interviewed and given a self-assessment psycho-social test (Rabin, 2018, p. 1). Along with deportation; poverty, familial dysfunction, and educational concerns have been considered. Historically, migration to the United States was "circular," which means immigrants would work, and later return to their families. Immigration reforms have changed migration patterns. Once in the United States, migrants must decide to return to their home countries or stay illegally without return, this is known as the "caging effect" (Rabin, 2018, p.9). Due to the caging effect parents
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Five of the thirty-eight participants were financially struggling due to being separated from their parents (Rabin, 2018, p. 28). Deportation of a parent causes major financial disadvantages, that result in extreme poverty. Many of the participants believe that immigration reforms contribute to their financial situation. They feel as though their parents are limited in job opportunities, therefore they are unable to live in better houses, attend higher education, and over all live a more fortunate lifestyle. Many participants were also separated from their families as way of financial relief (Rabin, 2018, p.