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Exiling Children, Creating Orphans: How Deportation Hurts Us All Luis H. Zayas, Ph.D. Children’s Policy Conference Texans Care for Children February 26, 2014 1
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Deportation leads to Louis Brandeis, U.S. Supreme Court 1922 2 “the loss of both property and life; or of all that makes life worth living.”
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The Immigration-Deportation Environment 3 Conflicting local & state & federal policies Aggressive enforcement practices Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Prosecutorial discretion 11.7 million unauthorized immigrants 5.5 million children in mixed-status families 4.5 million are U.S. citizen-children Pew Hispanic Center, 2011, 2012
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20051,291,065246,431 20061,206,412280,974 2007 960,772319,382 20081,043,774359,795 2009 869,828395,165 2010 752,307387,242 2011 641,601388,409 2012 643,474419,384 2013(awaiting figures)368,644 4 ICE: “Record Levels of Enforcement” YearApprehensions Removals Source: U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 2013
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Demographers’ Ratio 2:1 Capps et al., 2007 5
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Applying the Ratios 6 2005246,431123,215 61,608 2006280,974140,487 70,244 2007319,382159,691 79,846 2008359,795179,897 89,949 2009395,165197,582 98,792 2010387,242193,621 96,811 2011388,409194,204 97,103 2012419,384209,692104,846 2013368,644184,322 92,161 TOTALS 3,165,426 1,582,711791,360 YearRemovals 2:1 4:1
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Harm to Families Parents making anguishing decisions Children separated from parents Siblings separated from each other Older siblings taking care of younger siblings Children placed in custody of child welfare Parental rights terminated, sometimes Creating two classes of citizen-children Exiles Orphans 7
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Harm to Children 8 Psychological & Social Effects Anxiety & hyper-vigilance Depression Trauma Impaired attachment & bonding Ambiguous loss and grief Behavioral disorders Uneven conditions of siblings (USC v. UNDOC) DACA-eligible v. DACA-ineligible siblings Psychological & Social Effects Anxiety & hyper-vigilance Depression Trauma Impaired attachment & bonding Ambiguous loss and grief Behavioral disorders Uneven conditions of siblings (USC v. UNDOC) DACA-eligible v. DACA-ineligible siblings
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UT Austin Study Exploring the Effects of Parental Deportation Three groups of citizen-children Boys and girls ages 10-15 In U.S. or Mexico: post-deportation v. no deportation Group A: Parents deported, child in Mexico Group B/C: Parents deported, child stays in US Group D: No deportation experience, family in US Mental health measures Depression; anxiety; overall behavior; self-concept; trauma In-depth interviews 9 Study funded by the National Institute on Child Health and Human Development
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UT Austin Study Preliminary Results UT Austin Study 10 Study funded by the National Institute on Child Health and Human Development VariableOverallparent deported No parent deported Significance Somatic problems57.159.255.2Statistical Behavioral adjustment51.047.753.9Statistical Intellectual and school status50.047.652.2Statistical Freedom from anxiety49.546.352.4Statistical Happiness and satisfaction52.648.756.2Statistical Depression54.358.350.7Statistical Overall anxiety25.526.224.8Clinical Separation anxiety6.96.67.1Clinical NOTE: Study of 61 citizen-children (32 girls, 29 boys) with an average age of 11 years 9 months. The ‘parent deported’ group includes children in Mexico and U.S.
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Collateral Damage Visiting condemnation on the head of an infant is illogical and unjust.... Obviously, no child is responsible for his birth, and penalizing the child is an ineffectual—as well as unjust—way of deterring the parent. William J. Brennan, Jr., U.S. Supreme Court Plyer v. Doe (1982) 11
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Harm to Our Nation Developmental health of our nation Requires a healthy, well-educated, law-abiding labor force and citizenry Developmental outcomes that are truncated Behavioral & social-emotional competence Literacy & education Creativity What will be the skills abilities of these returning citizens? 12
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Policy Implications, I 13 Recognize that present system is no longer a viable Change laws Incorporate explicit language for children’s well-being during parents’ detention/removal Redefine “exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” to include mental health and education Humane prosecutorial and judicial discretion Keep immigrant parents out of detention Ensure child’s best interest before detaining/removing parent Favor supervised release of parent over detention Ensure children’s access to parents during detention Ensure family unity & equity, and family reunification
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Policy Implications, II 14 If must deport, provide assistance to child in US or outside Practices Safe havens or school programs to assist children directly after arrests USDHS and USDHHS develop child protection and trauma- minimizing methods Improve communication between immigration and child welfare systems Involve service providers for citizen-children facing exile State level: Grant extensions of child dependency cases to avoid terminating the parental rights Educate child welfare and juvenile courts on detention and deportation
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