Literature DB >> 33666527

Familial Vulnerability: Legal Status and Mental Health within Mixed-Status Families.

Ryan I Logan1, Milena A Melo2, Heide Castañeda3.   

Abstract

Mental and emotional well-being are intimately entangled with immigration status, personal relationships, and the broader political environment. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in South Texas including interviews with mixed-status families, this article illustrates the spillover impacts affecting mental and emotional health of family members with different legal statuses. Building on the notion of "structural vulnerability," we propose the concept of familial vulnerability, a lens which highlights how racialization, legal status, and discrimination affect the family unit. Our analysis of the mental health impacts on family members within mixed-status families may inform necessary changes to programs and policies to improve the needs of this population.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mixed-status families; U.S.–Mexico borderlands; deservingness; mental health; precarity; structural vulnerability

Year:  2021        PMID: 33666527     DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2021.1879061

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol        ISSN: 0145-9740


  2 in total

1.  Large-Scale Immigration Worksite Raids and Mixed-Status Families: Separation, Financial Crisis, and Family Role Rearrangement.

Authors:  William D Lopez; Katherine M Collins; Guadalupe R Cervantes; Dalila Reynosa; Julio C Salazar; Nicole L Novak
Journal:  Fam Community Health       Date:  2022 Apr-Jun 01

2.  Perceived general, mental, and physical health of Latinos in the United States following adoption of immigrant-inclusive state-level driver's license policies: a time-series analysis.

Authors:  Cristian Escalera; Paula D Strassle; Stephanie M Quintero; Ana I Maldonado; Diana Withrow; Alia Alhomsi; Jackie Bonilla; Veronica Santana-Ufret; Anna María Nápoles
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2022-08-24       Impact factor: 4.135

  2 in total

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