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Zayas, Luis H. – ZERO TO THREE, 2018
Aggressive immigration enforcement hurts the very youngest children. Refugee and U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants experience many childhood adversities, compromising their development and health. Refugee children flee traumatizing violence in their home countries, face grueling migrations, and are harmed further by being held in…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Law Enforcement, Refugees, Children
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Davis, Jennifer M.; Finke, Erinn H. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2015
Military families with a child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are underrepresented in the literature. In order to provide appropriate services, research must be done to determine the needs of these families. A qualitative methodology was used to interview military spouses with children with ASD about their experiences with therapeutic…
Descriptors: Military Personnel, Family (Sociological Unit), Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Suro, Roberto; Suárez-Orozco, Marcelo M.; Canizales, Stephanie L. – Tomas Rivera Policy Institute, 2015
A parent's immigration status influences how a child grows up. That basic finding is grounded in the broad mainstream of current research on childhood development, which has concluded that parental factors can be powerful determinants of their offspring's well being all the way into adulthood. As this report shows, a parent's immigration status…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Parents, Parent Influence, Undocumented Immigrants
Gomez, Daniel P.; Ybanez, Cindy – School Business Affairs, 2012
Envision the military family, being given as few as 30 days to pack, take their children out of school, leave their residence, settle in a new home, enroll the children in a new school, and take care of the myriad details for the military parent's relocation or deployment. Military families undergo this process over and over. The moves can affect…
Descriptors: Children, Military Personnel, Relocation, Migrant Children
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Klingman, Avigdor – School Psychology International, 2000
Examines the response of children in the Golan Heights to the ambiguous situation during the continuing peace talks between Israel and Syria concerning a possible evacuation of the region's settlers. Results suggest that social support, defensiveness, religion, and living in smaller settlements predicted better coping, whereas less social support…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Anxiety, Children, Collective Settlements
Alston, Enid; Stratford, Robert – 1996
This pilot study on international relocation examined the adjustment experiences of 68 children, age 9 to 11 years, who relocated to Vienna, Austria either from their native country or from another overseas setting. The study proposed an additive model of adjustment which took into account potential sources of adjustment within the relocation…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Anxiety, Childhood Attitudes, Children
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Carothers, Shannon S.; Borkowski, John G.; Whitman, Thomas L. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2006
Children born to adolescent mothers have heightened vulnerability for exposure to multiple stressful life events owing to factors associated with teenaged parenthood such as poverty and low levels of maternal education. This study investigated whether early exposure to negative life events such as parental divorce, residential instability, and…
Descriptors: Early Parenthood, Mothers, Children, At Risk Persons