在义务和抱负之间:无人陪伴的青少年移民工人的跨国生活和想象中的未来

IF 2.8 1区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Stephanie L. Canizales
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引用次数: 0

摘要

依靠民族志观察和对无证拉丁裔年轻人(18-31岁)的深度访谈,这些年轻人作为无人陪伴的未成年人(11-17岁)来到加州洛杉矶,本研究考察了移民青年工人的移民动机、他们的跨国关系以及跨国主义对他们想象中的未来的影响。调查结果表明,在结构性暴力和社区暴力以及贫困的背景下,中美洲和墨西哥青年在很小的时候就独自移民,部分原因是为了履行道德义务,在照顾网络中为他们最终离开的家庭提供经济和情感支持。对许多留守家庭来说,随着父母和兄弟姐妹进入新的人生阶段,他们的需求也在增加。未婚跨国青年工作者尤其有可能承担道德义务。这段时间,他们正在美国步入成年,权衡自己在洛杉矶或家乡社区的教育前景和职业流动性。在进入青年期的整个过渡阶段,维持青春期确立的道德义务可能会导致年轻人重新设想未来,包括留下的可能性和其他选择。这项研究对跨国家庭性质的变化、无人陪伴的未成年人的成年以及美国流动青年工人的生活提供了重要的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Between obligations and aspirations: unaccompanied immigrant teen workers’ transnational lives and imagined futures
Relying on ethnographic observation and in-depth interviews with undocumented Latinx young adults (18–31) who arrived in Los Angeles, California, as unaccompanied minors (11–17), this study examines immigrant youth workers’ migration motives, their transnational ties and transnationalism’s effect on their imagined futures. Findings show that, in the context of structural and community violence and poverty, Central American and Mexican youth migrate alone at young ages, in part to fulfill moral obligations to provide financial and emotional support within networks of care for the families they eventually leave behind. For many, left-behind family’s needs increase as parents and siblings age into new life stages. Unmarried transnational youth workers are especially likely to shoulder moral obligations. This is while they transition into young adulthood in the US and weigh their own prospects for education and occupational mobility in Los Angeles or their home communities. Maintaining moral obligations established in adolescence throughout the transition into young adulthood can cause youth to reimagine futures to include the possibility of staying and other alternatives. This research offers important insights into the changing nature of transnational families, unaccompanied minors’ coming of age, and the lives of migrant youth workers in the US.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
157
期刊介绍: The Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (JEMS) publishes the results of first-class research on all forms of migration and its consequences, together with articles on ethnic conflict, discrimination, racism, nationalism, citizenship and policies of integration. Contributions to the journal, which are all fully refereed, are especially welcome when they are the result of original empirical research that makes a clear contribution to the field of migration JEMS has a long-standing interest in informed policy debate and contributions are welcomed which seek to develop the implications of research for policy innovation, or which evaluate the results of previous initiatives. The journal is also interested in publishing the results of theoretical work.
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