By Brenda Lopez Romero
Impunity Watch Reporter, North America desk
WASHINGTON, D.C. – On February 02, 2010, the Urban Institute that works on nonpartisan economic and social policy research released a report titled “Facing Our Future: Children in the Aftermath of Immigration Enforcement.”
Currently, Congress is debating immigration reform and particularly the issue of an estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants. There are arguments both ways of economic contributions, unemployment concerns, tax and fiscal costs, and the integration of immigrants into the larger community. However, the report indicates that little discussion has been placed on the children of immigrant parent, an estimated 5.5 million children, whom about three-quarters are U.S.-born citizens. They faced the fear that one day their parents will be deported. The reported wrote “in the last 10 years, over 100,000 immigrant parents of U.S. citizen children have been deported from the United States.”
The report examined 190 children in 85 families in six cities in the United States. It studied the short, intermediate, and long term impact and effect on these children after worksite raids, raids on their homes, or operations by local police officers. The reported included a “standardized assessments of child behavior, parental mental health, family food sufficiency, [and] housing characteristics.” The families included parents that were undocumented and mixed status. The reports found children have a multitude of behavioral changes, especially when the arrest or raid happened in a home invasion by immigration officers. The range of effects included disrupted eating and sleeping habits, anxiety, withdrawal, and aggressiveness.
The report also looked at the impact of the breadwinner being deported. One wife that was not detained or deported, although could not legally work found work out of economic necessity and stated “I want them to see that I’m not a burden for anybody. I don’t want to ask for anything, I know people can give you [things] but I won’t ask even if I’m drowning, even now that I have the water coming up to here, I haven’t done it.” The report found more than one-quarter of all families studied received TANF more than six months after arrest, and nearly half were receiving food stamps where the families would not have otherwise sought public benefits.
For more information, please see:
National Immigration Forum - In the Wake of a Raid, How do Families Survive? – 8 February 2010
Urban Institute - Facing Our Future: Children in the Aftermath of Immigration Enforcement - 2 February 2010




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