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Journal Article

Citation

Ramirez M, Argueta NL, Castro Y, Pérez R, Dawson DB. Journal of Borderlands Studies 2016; 31(1): 91-105.

Affiliation

Graduate Student, Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin, 108 E. Dean Keaton, A8000, Austin, TX 78712, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Dept. of Economics, New Mexico State University)

DOI

10.1080/08865655.2015.1124244

PMID

27672240

PMCID

PMC5034942

Abstract

This paper reports the findings of research investigating the relationship of spill-over fears related to drug trafficking and of cultural identity to Mexican Americans' attitudes toward recent immigrants from Mexico in five non-metropolitan communities in the US-Mexico borderlands of South Texas. A mixed methods design was used to collect data from 91 participants (30 intact families with two parents and at least one young adult). Quantitative findings showed that the majority of participants expressed the view that most people in their communities believed that newcomers were involved in drug trafficking and in defrauding welfare programs. A significant interaction indicated that Mexican cultural identity buffered the negative effects of drug trafficking fears as related to the view that the newcomers were creating problems in the communities and region. Qualitative data yielded positive and negative themes, with those that were negative being significantly more numerous. The findings have implications for intra-ethnic relations in borderlands communities as well as for immigration policy.


Language: en

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