Factors Affecting the Job Satisfaction of Latino/a Immigrants in the Midwest

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Factors Affecting the Job Satisfaction of Latino/a Immigrants in the Midwest Lisa Y. Flores, Ph.D. Department of Educational, School, & Counseling Psychology Corinne Valdivia, Ph.D. Department of Agricultural Economics University of Missouri Funded by National Research Initiative of the Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (CSREES), U.S. Department of Agriculture

Introduction Rapid growth of foreign-born population 11% of the U.S. population, most (53%) of whom come from Latin American countries

Introduction, cont d Work opportunities is a major pull factor In comparison to other foreign-born groups, Latinos tend to be younger, have lower levels of education, lower incomes, larger households, and higher poverty rates More likely to be in the labor force and to work in low-skilled, physically demanding, low paying jobs

Introduction, cont d Psychology can contribute valuable knowledge regarding the immigrant experience Lags behind other disciplines in producing scholarship in this area Psychology literature has examined immigrants mental health and adjustment Little attention in vocational psychology literature

Introduction, cont d Migration patterns are changing Labor demands in manufacturing and processing companies in rural counties Moving has a negative impact on earnings (Dozi & Valdivia, 2008) Understanding what contributes to job satisfaction of Latino immigrants is an important question.

Purpose of Current Study In response to calls for more research on immigrant workers, we seek to explore the effects of Psychosocial Environmental Work-related factors on Latino immigrants job satisfaction

Livelihood Strategies Model Economic Capital (Savings & Assets) Human Capital (Education, Skill, Language Proficiency Nutrition Health) Livelihood Outcomes +Building Assets: economic and social wellbeing -Vulnerability: - mobility Livelihood Strategies capabilities the ability to act Cultural Capital (Identity & Institutions) Social Capital (Networks of Support Bridging and Bonding) Integrating (+) Community Climate (Context of Reception) Alienating (-)

Participants 253 Latino immigrants 58.5% female, 41.5% male Average 35.28 years (SD = 9.98; range = 18-77) Average11.22 years (SD = 7.29) in U.S. Average 5 years (SD = 5.17) in Midwest 54.5% were married

Participants, cont d

Participants, cont d

Participants, cont d

Communities Community A Population of 1,863; 22% Latino Agricultural, processing firms Community B Population of 20,196; 5.6% Latino Manufacturing, services and retail Community C Population of 6,050; 4% Latino Hospitality industry, retirement centers, construction

Measures Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure-Revised (Phinney & Ong, 2007) 6 items Bidimensional Acculturation Scale for Hispanics (Marin & Gamba, 1996) 24 items Community Climate Scale (Social/cultural relations; discrimination and racism; language use) 27 items Job Satisfaction 2 items Demographic survey asked about current employment (employer, duration on job, hours worked per week, and monthly wages)

Procedures Worked with trusted organizations (churches, community centers) and gatekeepers in the immigrant community Interviewers administered the survey one-on-one All interviews conducted in Spanish Interviews took 45 minutes to 1 hour

Results: Hierarchical Multiple Regression Analysis Step 1: Ethnic identity, Anglo acculturation, Latino acculturation [F(3, 249) = 5.30, p <.001] explained 6% of variance Step 2: Social/cultural relations, discrimination & racism, language use R² =.10, F(3, 246) = 9.42, p <.001) Step 3: job tenure, hours worked per week, monthly salary R² = <.01; F(3, 243) =.67, p =.57)

Results, cont d Significant individual predictors of Latino/a immigrant workers job satisfaction were: Ethnic identity (β =.15, t = 2.35, p <.05) Anglo oriented acculturation (β =.14, t = -3. 07, p <.05) Perceived discrimination and racism in the community (β = -.25, t = 2.35, p <.01)

Results, cont d Latino acculturation, perceptions of the community related to social relations and language pressures, job tenure, hours worked, and salary had not significant effects on Latino immigrant workers job satisfaction. Economic factors are not primary source of Latino immigrants job satisfaction.

Implications Promote strong levels of ethnic identity in immigrant workers Anglo acculturation emphasis on language usage and fluency has positive effect on Latino s career development. Provide opportunities for English language acquisition Courses need to be accessible (location, time) Language CDs that can be used at home

Implications, cont d Discuss differences between urban and rural living to prepare newcomers Educate members of receiving community about Latino and immigrant cultures Help newcomers identify discrimination and to develop effective strategies for responding to these situation.