@article{Gonzalez_Morgan_2013, title={The Aftermath of Deportation: Effects on the Family}, volume={46}, url={https://journal.sipsych.org/index.php/IJP/article/view/307}, DOI={10.30849/rip/ijp.v46i3.307}, abstractNote={<p>The primary aim of this qualitative study was to understand how Latino<ins datetime="2011-10-10T16:27" cite="mailto:itg%20itg">/a</ins> families in the United States are affected when a family member is deported. The U.S. Census Bureau (2008) reports that 4% of the population is undocumented immigrants and that 47% of households with an undocumented immigrant are family households (e.g. have a spouse or child). Given this large number of families liable for experiencing deportation, the need to conduct a study exploring this phenomenon seemed important. Five individuals who identified as Latino/a and who had a family member deported were interviewed and data was analyzed following a phenomenological approach. Five main themes emerged: lifestyle changes and adjustments, social support, impact on family unit, impact on individual family members, and solutions to family separation. These results are discussed as well as possible implications.</p>}, number={3}, journal={Revista Interamericana de Psicología/Interamerican Journal of Psychology}, author={Gonzalez, Nelly and Morgan, Melissa}, year={2013}, month={Apr.} }