2021
DOI: 10.1093/sf/soab152
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Work Primacy and the Social Incorporation of Unaccompanied, Undocumented Latinx Youth in the United States

Abstract: This study investigates the social incorporation of unaccompanied, undocumented Latinx youth workers as they come of age in the United States. Based on research with undocumented Central American and Mexican young adults who grew up as unaccompanied minors in Los Angeles, California, the data reveal that the pressures of financial obligations to families in the sending country and their own sobrevivencia (survival) in the United States, along with limited financial and social resource and mobility, produce a s… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Many of today’s Latinx newcomers come of age in diverse household dynamics (Landale et al 2011) with precarious class and legal statuses (Massey, Durand, and Pren 2016) and complex educational and employment trajectories (Oropesa and Landale 2009). Indeed, the unprecedented rise of unaccompanied youth migration to the United States over the past decade has prompted researchers to investigate the diversification of transnational immigrant households, with children migrating to support left-behind adult parents and siblings (Canizales 2018; Heidbrink 2014, 2020); the tensions that emerge between school and work for migrant youth (Canizales n.d.; Diaz-Strong 2020; Martinez 2019); and youth’s own imagined futures in their transitions into adulthood (Canizales and O’Connor forthcoming). Existing findings point to undocumented youth workers’ tendencies to be absent from school upon arriving in the United States and possibilities for stagnant or downward incorporation, but we know very little about their school-going experiences and processes of educational meaning making during their transitions into adulthood.…”
Section: Literature Review and Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Many of today’s Latinx newcomers come of age in diverse household dynamics (Landale et al 2011) with precarious class and legal statuses (Massey, Durand, and Pren 2016) and complex educational and employment trajectories (Oropesa and Landale 2009). Indeed, the unprecedented rise of unaccompanied youth migration to the United States over the past decade has prompted researchers to investigate the diversification of transnational immigrant households, with children migrating to support left-behind adult parents and siblings (Canizales 2018; Heidbrink 2014, 2020); the tensions that emerge between school and work for migrant youth (Canizales n.d.; Diaz-Strong 2020; Martinez 2019); and youth’s own imagined futures in their transitions into adulthood (Canizales and O’Connor forthcoming). Existing findings point to undocumented youth workers’ tendencies to be absent from school upon arriving in the United States and possibilities for stagnant or downward incorporation, but we know very little about their school-going experiences and processes of educational meaning making during their transitions into adulthood.…”
Section: Literature Review and Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…H. Lee 2019; Zhou 1998). Having worked in their home countries, Latinx immigrant youth workers enter the United States not only to assume their social roles as workers but also to act as financial providers for their left-behind families (Canizales 2015, n.d.; Martinez 2019). Here, I examine undocumented youth workers’ interactions with and perceptions of the institution of education, which are particularly influential in determining immigrant youth’s incorporation outcomes.…”
Section: Literature Review and Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
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