Group and Child–Family Migration from Central America to the United States: Forced Child–Family Separation, Reunification, and Pseudo Adoption in the Era of Globalization
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Materials and Methods
3. Historical Evolution of Intercountry Adoption from Latin America and Child Protection in Central American Northern Triangle Countries: Country Case Studies
3.1. The Case of El Salvador
3.2. The Case of Guatemala
3.3. The Case of Honduras
4. From Apprehension to Separation to Institutionalization and De Facto Adoption: Individual Case Studies
4.1. Forced Child–Family Separation Resulting from U.S. Immigration Policies
4.2. From Apprehension to Separation to Institutionalization and De Facto Adoption: Individual Case Examples
- (1)
- Separation by death: the death of toddlers, young children, youth, and adolescents during or soon after U.S. government custody;
- (2)
- Prolonged separation: the return of children to biological parents and relatives after extended or indefinite separation;
- (3)
- No reunification insight: families divided before, during, and after the zero-tolerance policy, with children remaining institutionalized as they are not eligible for adoption; and
- (4)
- Definite or temporary loss of parental rights: the loss of parental rights after detention of biological parents due to criminal charges (crossing without CBP inspection), the use of fraudulent documentation at work, or cases of domestic violence (those reported and investigated but not necessarily substantiated).
4.2.1. Cases of Separation by Death
4.2.2. Cases of Prolonged Separation
4.2.3. Cases of No Reunification in Sight
4.2.4. Cases of Definitive or Temporary Loss of Parental Rights
5. Discussion
5.1. Patterns, Policy Options, and Administrative Hurdles for Children in Current U.S. Systems
5.2. Implications for the Protection, Development, and Well-Being of Child Migrants in the U.S.
5.3. A Child Rights-Based Approach to the Care of Migrant Children in the U.S.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Monico, C.; Mendez-Sandoval, J. Group and Child–Family Migration from Central America to the United States: Forced Child–Family Separation, Reunification, and Pseudo Adoption in the Era of Globalization. Genealogy 2019, 3, 68. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy3040068
Monico C, Mendez-Sandoval J. Group and Child–Family Migration from Central America to the United States: Forced Child–Family Separation, Reunification, and Pseudo Adoption in the Era of Globalization. Genealogy. 2019; 3(4):68. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy3040068
Chicago/Turabian StyleMonico, Carmen, and Jovani Mendez-Sandoval. 2019. "Group and Child–Family Migration from Central America to the United States: Forced Child–Family Separation, Reunification, and Pseudo Adoption in the Era of Globalization" Genealogy 3, no. 4: 68. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy3040068
APA StyleMonico, C., & Mendez-Sandoval, J. (2019). Group and Child–Family Migration from Central America to the United States: Forced Child–Family Separation, Reunification, and Pseudo Adoption in the Era of Globalization. Genealogy, 3(4), 68. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy3040068