Through Iceboxes and Kennels: How Immigration Detention Harms Children and Families

Through Iceboxes and Kennels: How Immigration Detention Harms Children and Families

by Luis H. Zayas
Through Iceboxes and Kennels: How Immigration Detention Harms Children and Families

Through Iceboxes and Kennels: How Immigration Detention Harms Children and Families

by Luis H. Zayas

eBook

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Overview

Through stories and thoughtful analysis, this book shows how migration and U.S. immigration detention harms the future of immigrant children and their parents. For decades, the United States has used detention to control immigration. Through Iceboxes and Kennels traces the rise of family migration from Central America and why the U.S. incarcerated and separated thousands of children and parents. Zayas argues that answers are found in U.S. history. The book takes the reader across the licensing of detention centers in Texas as licensed childcare facilities, holding of teenage immigrants in residential treatment centers, and the full scope of the Family Separation Policy of 2018 that unleashed a national outcry. With a storyteller's ability and from sources as varied as history, politics, and psychology, Zayas identifies four stages in Central American migration-pre-migration forces that push people from their homes; mid-migration journeys fraught with hunger, violence, and pain; detention in cold rooms, cages, and jails; and the post-detention period of settlement and adjustment. In chapter after chapter, Zayas tells the stories-sometimes harrowing, always riveting-told to him by children and parents. Like epic narratives, there are villains and heroes, honesty and betrayal, and moments of abject desperation and of soaring valor. The book shows readers just how damaging detention is to the developing child's brain, body, and mental health. At once alarming and optimistic, Through Iceboxes and Kennels reveals the endurance of parents insistent on bringing their children to safety and security, and the inspiring gallantry of children, parents, and strangers. It is a book for those who want to understand the urgency of immigration reform and the need for humane policies and practices.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197668184
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 03/03/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Luis H. Zayas, PhD is Dean and Professor, and Robert Lee Sutherland Chair in Mental Health and Social Policy, Steve Hicks School of Social Work, University of Texas-Austin. At UT-Austin he also holds appointments as Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Dell Medical School and Affiliated Faculty, Lozano Long Institute for Latin American Studies. He is currently serving as President of the Society for Social Work Research (SSWR). Zayas has spent decades serving low-income minority families in urban communities and studying their lives and needs. He has been a teacher and researcher in universities and an advocate for the families he serves. His research has been cited nationally and internationally in leading newspapers and electronic media, and he is a frequent guest speaker across the United States, helping audiences understand the plight of immigrant and underprivileged families.

Table of Contents

A Note on Names and Terms Introduction PART I: The State of Affairs Chapter 1: The Poet, Heroic Mothers, and Cash Cows Chapter 2: Ordeals and Histories of Immigration Chapter 3: I Didn't Sign Up for This Chapter 4: Detention as Licensed Child Care, Texas-Style Chapter 5: Take the Children, Age Doesn't Matter. Chapter 6: Hiding Boys in Therapeutic Detention PART II: The Human Costs Chapter 7: Studying Families, Hearing Their Stories Chapter 8: Stages of Central American Immigration Chapter 9: Stress, Trauma, and Children's Development Chapter 10: I Need to Tell My Story, Too Chapter 11: Sleepless Under the Bridge in El Paso Chapter 12: A Mother's Self-Doubt, A Child's Hunger Chapter 13: Sufrir, Sufrimiento, and Hallucinating the Invisible Killer Girl Chapter 14: Four Generations of Mothers and Daughters Chapter 15: All That Comes After About the Contributors Acknowledgements References Index
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