Article
Demography
Tianjian Lai, Nathan I. Hoffmann, Roger Waldinger
Summary: Individual legal vulnerability increases Latino immigrants' worries about deportation, while social and group markers also have independent and intersecting associations with immigrants' concerns. Disadvantaged social traits such as lack of English language proficiency and lower levels of education are associated with higher rates of deportation anxiety, regardless of legal status, and also differentially shape the effects of legal status. Immigrants from national origin groups at greater risk of deportation tend to worry more, regardless of individual legal status.
JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES
(2023)
Article
Medicine, General & Internal
Molly Grassini, Sophie Terp, Briah Fischer, Sameer Ahmed, Madeline Ross, Niels Frenzen, Elizabeth Burner, Parveen Parmar
Summary: Deaths in ICE detention facilities from 2011 to 2018 primarily occurred among young men with low burdens of preexisting disease. Markedly abnormal vital signs preceded most nonsuicide deaths. The majority of detainee death reviews identified violations of PBNDS related to medical care.
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Emily Ryo
Summary: This study examines the effects of US deterrence policies on individuals' migration intentions and attitudes toward the US immigration system in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico. The findings show that increased awareness of US immigration enforcement policies does not impact individuals' intentions to migrate to the United States, but awareness of the widespread use of immigration detention negatively affects individuals' assessments of the fairness of the US immigration system.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
(2021)
Article
Sociology
Abigail Andrews, Fatima Khayar-Camara
Summary: Scholars estimate that 90 percent of U.S. deportees are men, with many of them having children in the United States. Upon returning to their home country, deported fathers adopt different fatherly roles, but they face various obstacles and institutional barriers.
Article
Sociology
Abigail Andrews, Fatima Khayar-Camara
Summary: Researchers have found that deported fathers adopt three distinct parenting identities post-deportation, which impact their relationships with their children. While most fathers strive to persist as parents after deportation, the deeper their entanglements in the system, the higher the obstacles to fathering they face.
Letter
Medicine, General & Internal
Felicia O. Casanova, Alice Hamblett, Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein, Kathryn M. Nowotny
Summary: This cohort study compares the burden of coronavirus disease 2019 among individuals detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement with the general US population.
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Maria-Elena De Trinidad Young, Denise Diaz Payan, Iris Y. Guzman-Ruiz
Summary: This study examines the structural processes by which immigration enforcement policy may impact the health of Latino immigrants. Through qualitative analysis of testimonios, the research reveals that enforcement experiences are not isolated incidents but part of a system of intersecting exclusions that shape social and economic conditions, leading to health impacts.
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
(2022)
Article
Economics
Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes, Esther Arenas-Arroyo
Summary: The study found that increased interior immigration enforcement in the United States negatively affects the fertility rates of undocumented immigrants, particularly due to police-based measures linked to increased deportations.
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION
(2021)
Article
Geography
Leah Montange
Summary: This article explores the impact of extending carceral immigration enforcement to a rural county in Washington State. As a result, migrant workers in shellfish, cranberry, and tourism industries began to leave the county voluntarily or forcefully due to deportation concerns. This disruption not only constrained the agency of undocumented workers but also destabilized the local race and labor regime, leading to labor shortages. The study argues for a nuanced understanding of the articulation between immigration control and labor regimes, highlighting the contradictions between their various functions.
ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERS
(2023)
Article
Demography
William Paul Simmons, Cecilia Menjivar, Elizabeth Salerno Valdez
Summary: The research suggests that increased involvement of local law enforcement in immigration enforcement may lead to greater social isolation among Latina immigrants, especially those with children, undermining their role as bridges between their families and social institutions.
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW
(2021)
Article
Economics
Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes, Brandyn Churchill, Yang Song
Summary: This study found that intensified immigration enforcement has negative effects on infant birth outcomes, especially during the third trimester of pregnancy. These findings underscore the importance of current immigration policies on the birth outcomes of many American children.
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS
(2022)
Article
Area Studies
Caress Schenk
Summary: This article highlights the intertwining of informal strategies with formal state practices in immigration control in Russia, one of the world's top five largest immigrant-receiving countries. It argues that state actors' simultaneous formal and informal activities can work together towards coherent goals, instead of presenting corruption as subversive of state institutions. The coercion-centered interactions between migrants and state agents produce visible data and media images that are projected to the public as immigration control.
POST-SOVIET AFFAIRS
(2021)
Article
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Rosa Weber
Summary: Prior research suggests that disruptive events such as family instability, neighborhood violence, or relocation have negative impacts on children's educational outcomes. Limited evidence is available on the effects of shocks resulting from immigration enforcement on educational outcomes among targeted minority groups. This study examines the relationship between the implementation of the US-Secure Communities policy and the achievement of Hispanic students at the school district level.
Article
Political Science
Alvaro Jose Corral
Summary: Why does ICE conduct worksite raids without charging employers? This article examines how exploitative labor conditions and ICE worksite enforcement raids contribute to the vulnerability of undocumented workers. Through analysis of interviews and government documents, it reveals that these operations are understood within the context of labor discrimination and worker exploitation. The tactic of worksite raids highlights the simultaneous regulation and deregulation of undocumented immigrant workers.
POLITICAL RESEARCH QUARTERLY
(2023)
Article
Demography
Eunice D. Vargas Valle, Erin R. Hamilton, Pedro P. Orraca Romano
Summary: Deportation of Mexican immigrants from the US interior has led to increased likelihood of intending to return to the USA, particularly if they left minor children with a spouse. Women have higher remigration plans, while plans slightly decreased among parents over time, indicating policy failure in considering immigrant family circumstances.
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
(2022)
Article
Health Care Sciences & Services
J. Wesley Boyd, Alice LoCicero, Monica Malowney, Rajendra Aldis, Robert P. Marlin
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES
(2014)
Article
Education & Educational Research
Nikhil A. Patel, Nina Sreshta, Amber Frank, Robert P. Marlin, J. Wesley Boyd
ACADEMIC PSYCHIATRY
(2019)
Article
Psychology, Social
Alice LoCicero, Robert P. Marlin, David Jull-Patterson, Nancy M. Sweeney, Brandon Lee Gray, J. Wesley Boyd
PEACE AND CONFLICT-JOURNAL OF PEACE PSYCHOLOGY
(2016)
Article
Health Care Sciences & Services
Ranjani K. Paradise, Yoon Susan Choi, Linda Cundiff, Mursal Khaliif, Laura Nevill, Robert P. Marlin, Ffyona Patel, Elisa Friedman
JOINT COMMISSION JOURNAL ON QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY
(2014)
Article
Health Policy & Services
Karen Hacker, Jocelyn Chu, Lisa Arsenault, Robert P. Marlin
JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR AND UNDERSERVED
(2012)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Samantha Horn, Yana Litovsky, George Loewenstein
Summary: This study suggests that curiosity can be a useful tool in increasing demand for and engagement with aversive health information. By manipulating curiosity through various methods, researchers found that participants were more likely to view and engage with information about their drinking habits, cancer risk, and the sugar content in drinks. Overall, curiosity prompts provide a simple and effective way to increase engagement with aversive health information.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Sandra Gillner
Summary: Despite high expectations, the extensive and rapid adoption of AI in medical diagnostics has not been realized. This study investigates the perception and navigation of AI providers in complex healthcare systems, revealing their self-organization to increase adaptability and the practices utilized to mitigate tensions within the healthcare subsystems.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Fabian Duartea, Alvaro Jimenez-Molina
Summary: This study found that violence related to social protest has a significant impact on depressive symptoms, leading to an increase in depression among the population in Chile. The effect varies by gender and age, with a stronger influence on men and young adults.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Nick Graetz, Carl Gershenson, Sonya R. Porter, Danielle H. Sandler, Emily Lemmerman, Matthew Desmond
Summary: Investments in stable, affordable housing may be an important tool for improving population health. This study, using administrative data, found that high rent burden, increases in rent burden during midlife, and evictions were associated with increased mortality.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Wan Wei
Summary: This study explores the phenomenon of other patient participation in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), uncovering the various roles that third parties can assume during medical interactions. The findings contribute to existing research on patient resistance and triadic medical interactions, providing insights into the dynamics and implications of third-party involvement in medical consultations.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Harry Scarbrough, Katie Rose M. Sanfilippo, Alexandra Ziemann, Charitini Stavropoulou
Summary: This paper examines the contribution of pilot implementation studies to the wider spread and sustainability of innovation in healthcare systems. Through an empirical examination of an innovation intermediary organization in the English NHS, the study finds that their work in mobilizing pilot-based evidence involves configuring to context, transitioning evidence, and managing the transition. The findings contribute to theory by showing how intermediary roles can support the effective transitioning of pilot-based evidence, leading to more widespread adoption and sustainability of innovation.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Marta Seiz, Leire Salazar, Tatiana Eremenko
Summary: This study examines the impact of maternal educational selection on birth outcomes during an economic recession, and finds that more educated mothers are more likely to give birth during high unemployment periods. Additionally, maternal education mitigates the adverse effects of unemployment on birth outcomes and is consistently associated with better perinatal health.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Jingyuan Shi, Hye Kyung Kim, Charles T. Salmon, Edson C. Tandoc Jr, Zhang Hao Goh
Summary: This study examines the influence of individual and collective norms on COVID-19 vaccination intention across eight Asian countries. The findings reveal nuanced patterns of how individual and collective social norms influence health behavioral decisions, depending on the degree of cultural tightness-looseness.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Elliot Friedman, Melissa Franks, Elizabeth Teas, Patricia A. Thomas
Summary: This study found that positive relations with others have a significant impact on functional limitations and longevity in aging adults, independent of social integration and social support.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Zhuolin Pan, Yuqi Liu, Ye Liu, Ziwen Huo, Wenchao Han
Summary: This study examines the effects of age-friendly neighbourhood environment and functional abilities on life satisfaction among older adults in urban China. The findings highlight the importance of transportation, housing, and social and physical environment factors in influencing functional abilities and life satisfaction. The study provides valuable insights for policymakers in enhancing older adults' life satisfaction in the Chinese urban context.
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
(2024)