Over generations of exclusion, undocumented Mexican immigrants have had to regularly confront a prohibiting health care system despite alienation, marginalization and the threat of deportation. In this talk, I discuss the impact of political exclusion and alienating discourses on the health practices and beliefs of undocumented Mexican mothers through the narrative of mothers in Houston, who find themselves at the painful intersection of political and medical alienation. These narratives reflect an analytical framework that center undocumented motherhood as a space of necessary resilience and resistance where women are forced to advocate for their children's health despite prohibitive barriers and dangerous potential consequences
This research explores the decision-making process of Latino parents when confronted with the health...
This dissertation examines the Latino Health Paradox through the immigrant journeys of Mexican immig...
Purpose – Latinos comprise 12.5 percent of the overall population in the USA, and are the fastest-gr...
This research study explored the experiences of ten undocumented Mexican women who are raising their...
In the context of macroeconomic and social processes that have feminized the undocumented Mexican mi...
This project examines how undocumented immigrants in the United States communicate health and illnes...
This note addresses how deportation of undocumented immigrants affects the U.S. citizen children of ...
Abstract Undocumented Mexican immigrant women in the United States are increasing in numbers, and th...
There is an interesting notion a “universal mothering ideology” (Hays, 1996) exists in the United St...
The United States has a long, complex and contradictory history in its use of governmental policies ...
Traumatic birth is a term used to describe a wide-range of negative physical and mental birthing eve...
The limited empirical data available on maternal health problems among Mexican immigrant women in th...
This introduction studies the experiences of racialized migrant women by focusing on three analytica...
This paper examines the case of Mexican immigrants in the United States and their access to medical ...
The health status of (undocumented) immigrant and refugee women is shaped by social, economic, and p...
This research explores the decision-making process of Latino parents when confronted with the health...
This dissertation examines the Latino Health Paradox through the immigrant journeys of Mexican immig...
Purpose – Latinos comprise 12.5 percent of the overall population in the USA, and are the fastest-gr...
This research study explored the experiences of ten undocumented Mexican women who are raising their...
In the context of macroeconomic and social processes that have feminized the undocumented Mexican mi...
This project examines how undocumented immigrants in the United States communicate health and illnes...
This note addresses how deportation of undocumented immigrants affects the U.S. citizen children of ...
Abstract Undocumented Mexican immigrant women in the United States are increasing in numbers, and th...
There is an interesting notion a “universal mothering ideology” (Hays, 1996) exists in the United St...
The United States has a long, complex and contradictory history in its use of governmental policies ...
Traumatic birth is a term used to describe a wide-range of negative physical and mental birthing eve...
The limited empirical data available on maternal health problems among Mexican immigrant women in th...
This introduction studies the experiences of racialized migrant women by focusing on three analytica...
This paper examines the case of Mexican immigrants in the United States and their access to medical ...
The health status of (undocumented) immigrant and refugee women is shaped by social, economic, and p...
This research explores the decision-making process of Latino parents when confronted with the health...
This dissertation examines the Latino Health Paradox through the immigrant journeys of Mexican immig...
Purpose – Latinos comprise 12.5 percent of the overall population in the USA, and are the fastest-gr...