Trauma and Immigrant Families

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Trauma and Immigrant Families Family Detention Poster, Detention Watch Network - www.detentionwatchnetwork.org Laura Valdéz, Chief Program Officer East Bay Agency for Children May 23, 2017 Early Childhood Funders Meeting

Three Kinds of Responses to Stress

Migration Trauma and Migration Stress Many immigrant families encounter multiple challenges and difficulties throughout the immigration process. Some families may experience multiple levels of migration trauma. Peri-migration trauma refers to psychological distress occurring at four points of the migration process: 1. Events before migration (e.g., extreme poverty, war exposure or torture); 2. Events during migration (e.g., parental separation, physical and sexual assault, theft of the money saved to immigrate with, exploitation at the hands of a human smuggler, hunger, or death of traveling companions); 3. Continued rejection and suffering while seeking asylum (e.g., chronic deprivation of basic needs); 4. And survival as an immigrant (e.g., substandard living conditions, lack of sufficient income or racism). Artwork by Jesus Barraza, Ni1Más

Persistent Fear and Anxiety Can Affect Young Children s Learning and Development. For young children who perceive the world as a threatening place, a wide range of conditions can trigger anxious behaviors that then impair their ability to learn and to interact socially with others. Research tells us that fears are not just passively forgotten over time. They must be actively unlearned. Fear learning can occur relatively early in life, whereas fear unlearning is only achieved later, when certain structures in the brain have matured. Consequently, early fear learning can have a significant impact on the physical and mental health of a young child that can take years to remediate. Artwork by Melanie Cervantes, Not1More Deportation

Research consistently shows that immigration enforcement actions have a harmful impact on the health, safety, academic performance and overall well-being of children, including U.S. citizens living in mixed-status families. According to a 2010 report by the Urban Institute, children who witnessed parents or family members apprehended in a home raid were much more likely to experience symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder than children whose parents were arrested in other settings, including greater changes in sleeping and eating patterns and much higher degrees of fear and anxiety, significant behavioral changes and increased absenteeism. Approximately 5 million U.S. children have at least one undocumented parent. The number of children that could be separated from one or both parents as a result of immigration enforcement is significant. Artwork by Angy Rivera, Parentless

TIME s 100 Most Influential People Jeanette Vizguerra Jeanette Vizguerra leaves sanctuary, May 12, 2017. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite) "The hardest thing for Jeanette Vizguerra about spending 86 days in church sanctuary was being away from her children at night. And the hardest thing now that she s out is knowing that so many other people do not have the reprieve that she received on Thursday."

ICE Deportation Priority: Children & Families The recent intensification of immigration enforcement activities by the federal government increasingly add stressors to families with undocumented members and puts children at risk of family separation, economic hardship and psychological trauma. These intensified enforcement activities include deportation of immigrants who have committed crimes; door-to-door operations to arrest immigrants with deportation orders; and large-scale raids of suspected undocumented immigrants worksites. ICE has now eliminated the practice of halting deportations because of pending amnesty legislation, private immigration bills. Artwork by Kim Baglieri, We Will Not Be Divided

Processing and detention procedures make it difficult to arrange care for children when parents are arrested. Many arrestees unknowingly sign voluntary departure papers and are deported before they can contact their families. Detained immigrants have very limited access to telephones to communicate with their families, and many are moved to remote detention facilities outside the states in which they were arrested. Artwork by Emily McGowan, Just Like You After the arrest or disappearance of their parents, children experience feelings of abandonment and show symptoms of emotional trauma, psychological distress and mental health problems. For families, the combination of fear, isolation and economic hardship induce mental health problems such as depression, separation anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder and suicidal thoughts.

Research has identified a common set of factors that predispose children to positive outcomes in the face of significant adversity. 1. Facilitating supportive adult-child relationships; 2. Building a sense of self-efficacy and perceived control; 3. Providing opportunities to strengthen adaptive skills and selfregulatory capacities; and 4. Mobilizing sources of faith, hope, and cultural traditions. Artwork by Jason Zepeda and La Mina Circle, 50 Butterflies & 11 Millions Stripes

Protective Factors that Promote Resiliency

Trauma-informed care was developed in response to the growing recognition of the impact of traumatic experiences on the lives of vulnerable children and their families. While not designed with one specific system in mind, the trauma-integrated model is based on acknowledging the pervasive impact of direct and indirect exposure to violence and other traumatic stressors which can serve, with some adaptations as a platform on which effective and culturally responsive services for immigrants and refugees can be built. Essential elements of trauma-informed services Maximize the child s sense of safety; Assist children in reducing overwhelming emotion; Help children make new meaning of their trauma history and current experiences; Address the impact of trauma and subsequent changes in the child s behavior, development and relationships; Coordinate services with other agencies; staff should also be familiar with existing networks of services familiar to and trusted by immigrants, such as ethnic communitybased organizations, faith-based organizations; Support and promote positive and stable relationships in the life of the child; Provide culturally responsive support and guidance to the child s family and caregivers in their primary language; and Manage professional stress and vicarious trauma. Artwork by Raquel Rojas, Escondidos

Artwork by Caryl Henry Alexander, Do Something

Support & Advocacy Support, advocate and organize for the defense and protection of immigrants and refugees from deportation, detention, harassment, discrimination and exclusion. Advocate to stop raids and halt deportation proceedings. Make public statements denouncing ICE raids. Advocate for Comprehensive Immigration Reform with Elected Officials. Encourage elected officials to advocate for parents, children and youth in removal proceedings. Advocate that school districts pass a Safe Zone resolution, like LAUSD s that forbids immigration enforcement agents from going on campus without approval from the superintendent and a thorough review of order and clearance from the district s law office. Ensure children, youth and families have access to counseling and support groups. Support immigrant rights movement organizing and capacity building. Challenge the racist and xenophobic narrative of division, distrust and hate.

Visibility is important. Have banners and posters in English and other languages spoken at the school that articulate that the school supports immigrant student/parents affirming. Widely distribute Know Your Rights (KYR) materials and host KYR workshops. Work with immigrant parents to develop a family immigration raid emergency plan, Family Preparedness Plan. Provide legal advice for immigrant families especially given the challenges for mixed status families. ILRC offers plans in English, Spanish and Chinese. Provide training to community members who wish to serve as an Immigration Resource Advocate in their apartment building, neighborhood, church/faith group or school campus. Provide Immigration Resource Advocates with a list of resources, such as the names of mental health providers, social workers, pro bono attorneys and local immigration advocates and organizations.