Growing up in transit. Personal development and resistance of migrant adolescents travelling through Mexico unaccompanied

IF 3.9 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Migration and Health Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jmh.2024.100245
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Abstract

Mexico is a major global migration corridor. The last decade has seen an increase in adolescents travelling unaccompanied from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, mainly due to violence and natural disasters. This group of migrants is exposed to migration risks such as trafficking and exploitation, as well as multiple deportations and long waiting times without appropriate access to health and education services. These conditions have significant documented adverse impacts on health and mental health, but the impact on personal development has been less explored. Thus, this article aims to explore the impact of migration transit on identity and resilience of unaccompanied migrant youth, psychosocial mental health constructs that are important for wellbeing and personal development. Through 47 semi-structured interviews conducted with migrant youth and different migration workers in summer 2021 in two migrant shelters in Mexico City and Guadalajara, we found that possibilities for identity building for migrant youth were restricted in a context of curbed freedom. Violence and poverty led to loss of crucial formative years, pushing many to aspire only to work – regardless of the type of work. Resilience overlapped with resistance but was generally maintained with cultural narratives of goal achievement, faith and hope. Strong responsibility towards sending remittances to family made family one of the main goals of the migration journey. Workers highlighted how regional migration management, underlined by discriminatory policies which place profit and national security ideology before a recognition of common humanity, is a considerable barrier to funding services and advancing access to rights for youth. However, youth showed recognition of their own agency and humanity, which represents an important basis on which to build a counter-discriminatory vision and management of this migration. Results are reported according to COREQ guidelines.

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在过境中成长。在无人陪伴的情况下穿越墨西哥的移民青少年的个人成长和抵抗力
墨西哥是全球主要的移民通道。在过去十年中,主要由于暴力和自然灾害,从危地马拉、洪都拉斯和萨尔瓦多孤身旅行的青少年越来越多。这一移民群体面临着贩运和剥削等移民风险,以及多次被驱逐出境和长时间等待而无法获得适当的医疗和教育服务。这些情况对健康和心理健康有重大不利影响,但对个人发展影响的探讨却较少。因此,本文旨在探讨移民过境对孤身移民青年的身份认同和复原力的影响,以及对福祉和个人发展具有重要意义的社会心理健康建构。2021 年夏季,我们在墨西哥城和瓜达拉哈拉的两个移民收容所对移民青年和不同的移民工作者进行了 47 次半结构式访谈,发现在自由受到限制的情况下,移民青年建立身份认同的可能性受到了限制。暴力和贫困导致他们失去了关键的成长期,促使许多人只渴望工作--无论工作类型如何。复原力与抵触情绪交织在一起,但一般都是通过实现目标、信念和希望的文化叙事来维持的。向家人汇款的强烈责任感使家庭成为移徙旅程的主要目标之一。工人们强调,歧视性政策将利润和国家安全意识形态置于对共同人性的承认之 前,这种政策所强调的地区移民管理是如何成为资助服务和促进青年获得权利的重大障 碍的。然而,青年对其自身的能动性和人性表示认可,这为建立反歧视观点和管理移民工作奠定了重要基础。根据 COREQ 准则报告结果。
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来源期刊
Journal of Migration and Health
Journal of Migration and Health Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
153 days
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