Acculturative stress in Latino Immigrants: The impact of social, socio-psychological and migration-related factors |
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Authors: | Kerstin Lueck Machelle Wilson |
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Institution: | a Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley, 410 Barrows, Berkeley, CA, USA;b Universidad del Norte, Department of Mathematics/Statistics, Colombia |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this study was to investigate factors that predict acculturative stress in a nationally representative sample of Latino migrants. The participants in this study were 2059 Latinos. Among them were 868 Mexicans, 577 Cubans and 614 other Latinos. The subcategory other Latinos consisted of immigrants and refugees from Colombia, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Peru and Nicaragua. The participants took part in face-to-face interviews, which were conducted with computer-assisted interviewing software in Spanish and English. Findings revealed that acculturative stress decreases with an increase in the English proficiency index, the context of migration exit index, and the social network index. Furthermore, acculturative stress was lower for US citizens versus non-citizens; immigrants who wanted to migrate to the US versus refugees who had to leave their country of origin; and later generation immigrants. Acculturative stress increases with a higher native language proficiency index and a higher discrimination index. |
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Keywords: | Acculturative stress Latino immigrants Latino Americans Ethnicity Migration Socio-psychological |
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