Coleman-Minahan Kate, Villarreal Melissa, Samari Goleen
College of Nursing, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA.
University of Colorado Population Research Center, University of Colorado Boulder, CO, USA.
J Migr Health. 2023 Jan 24;7:100156. doi: 10.1016/j.jmh.2023.100156. eCollection 2023.
The 1.5 generation, brought to the U.S. prior to age 16, faces barriers that the second generation, U.S.-born to immigrant parents, does not, including only temporary legal protection through the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) Program. Little is known about how legal status and uncertainty shape cisgender immigrant young women's reproductive aspirations.
Drawing on the Theory of Conjunctural Action with attention to the immigrant optimism and bargain hypotheses, we conducted an exploratory qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with seven 1.5 generation DACA recipients and eleven second generation Mexican-origin women, 21-33 years old in 2018. Interviews focused on reproductive and life aspirations, migration experiences, and childhood and current economic disadvantage. We conducted a thematic analysis using a deductive and inductive approach.
Data resulted in a conceptual model on the pathways through which uncertainty and legal status shape reproductive aspirations. Participants aspired to complete higher education and have a fulfilling career, financial stability, a stable partnership, and parents' support prior to considering childbearing. For the 1.5 generation, uncertainty of their legal status makes the thought of parenting feel scary, while for the second generation, the legal status of their parents makes parenting feel scary. Achieving desired stability before childbearing is more challenging and uncertain for the 1.5 generation.
Temporary legal status constrains young women's reproductive aspirations by limiting their ability to achieve desired forms of stability prior to parenting and making the thought of parenting frightening. More research is needed to further develop this novel conceptual model.
1.5代移民在16岁之前来到美国,面临着第二代(父母为移民但在美国出生)所没有的障碍,包括仅通过童年抵美者暂缓遣返计划(DACA)获得临时法律保护。对于法律身份和不确定性如何塑造顺性别移民年轻女性的生育愿望,我们知之甚少。
借鉴情境行动理论,关注移民乐观主义和交易假说,我们于2018年对7名1.5代DACA受惠者和11名第二代墨西哥裔女性(年龄在21 - 33岁之间)进行了半结构化访谈,开展了一项探索性定性研究。访谈聚焦于生育和生活愿望、移民经历以及童年和当前的经济劣势。我们采用演绎和归纳的方法进行了主题分析。
数据形成了一个概念模型,阐述了不确定性和法律身份塑造生育愿望的途径。参与者渴望在考虑生育之前完成高等教育、拥有充实的职业、财务稳定、稳定的伴侣关系以及父母的支持。对于1.5代来说,其法律身份的不确定性使得为人父母的想法令人恐惧,而对于第二代来说,其父母的法律身份使得为人父母令人恐惧。对于1.5代而言,在生育前实现期望的稳定更具挑战性且不确定。
临时法律身份通过限制年轻女性在为人父母之前实现期望稳定形式的能力,并使为人父母的想法令人恐惧,从而制约了她们的生育愿望。需要更多研究来进一步完善这个新颖的概念模型。