Two pathways to Mexico: Forced deportation or voluntary return of parents and US citizen children

Author:

Zayas Luis H.1,Natera Guillermina2,Callejas Fransilvania2,Esponda Georgina Miguel2,Pinedo Miguel1,Fuentes‐Balderrama Jaime2

Affiliation:

1. University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

2. Ramón de la Fuente Muñiz National Institute of Psychiatry Mexico City Mexico

Abstract

AbstractHundreds of thousands of undocumented Mexican immigrants were deported from the United States or returned to Mexico voluntarily in the past two decades, taking with them their US‐born citizen children (USCC). A family's relocation—forced deportation or voluntary return—and the subsequent settlement and adjustment to Mexico affect everyone's well‐being. We interviewed 18 USCC whose parents were forcibly deported and 18 whose parents returned voluntarily about their circumstances, experiences, and perceptions. Four categories of relocation and adjustment issues emerged. USCC with deported parents felt the sudden and harsh arrest, detention, deportation, and separation from parents, and family reunification after deportation. Those in the voluntary‐return group told of concerns about the planned separation and relocation to Mexico. Both groups experienced issues of family reintegration and adjustment to a new environment. While relocation prompted similarities and differences in families' settlement, issues unique to families played a part in children's adjustment. Clinicians in both the United States and Mexico must take into consideration the nature of the relocation, families' distinctive reactions, and the individual child's experience as some USCC will remain in Mexico and others will return to the US Mexican clinicians will encounter USCC still settling and adjusting to Mexico, and USCC who decide to remain permanently in Mexico. US clinicians may encounter USCC facing the challenges of re‐entering American society, joining educational institutions, and becoming part of the labor force. USCC forming families may feel the impact of their pasts in parenting dynamics.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference46 articles.

1. Latino family mental health: exploring the role of discrimination and familismo

2. Baum J. Jones R. &Barry C.(2010).In the child's best interest? The consequences of losing a lawful immigrant parent to deportation. Retrieved fromwww.law.ucdavis.edu/news/images/childsbestinterest.pdf

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