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No Calm Before the Storm: Low-Income Latina Immigrant and Citizen Mothers Before and After COVID-19

Marci Ybarra, Frania Mendoza Lua

2023RSF The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Government pandemic provisions occurred alongside a safety net that excludes or dissuades Latina mothers from participation. These families are also disproportionately exposed to punitive immigration policies and rhetoric that may shape their views on such provisions and, in turn, influence their post-pandemic well-being. To understand these complexities, we draw on interviews before and after COVID-19 with thirty-eight Latina immigrant and citizen mothers, most of whom are undocumented (<i>N</i> = 29). We find that pre-pandemic distrust of public institutions and the safety net was common, increased after COVID-19, and negatively affected undocumented respondents’ post-pandemic circumstances relative to that of citizen mothers. Findings suggest that safety net expansion on its own will not offset pandemic effects for these families without addressing exclusion from public benefits and alienation from and distrust of government.

Topics & Concepts

DistrustImmigrationPandemicGovernment (linguistics)Political scienceAlienationPunitive damagesRhetoricCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)CriminologyEconomic growthDemographic economicsSociologyLawMedicineEconomicsLinguisticsPathologyPhilosophyInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseHomelessness and Social IssuesMigration, Health and Trauma
No Calm Before the Storm: Low-Income Latina Immigrant and Citizen Mothers Before and After COVID-19 | Litcius