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Learning to Be Illegal: Undocumented Youth and Shifting Legal Contexts in the Transition to Adulthood
by
Gonzales, Roberto G.
in
Acculturation
/ Adjustment (to Environment)
/ Adolescence
/ Adolescent Attitudes
/ Adolescents
/ Adulthood
/ Adults
/ Age
/ Aspirations
/ Assimilation
/ California
/ Child development
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Colleges & universities
/ Coming of age
/ Context Effect
/ Coping
/ Education
/ Educational attainment
/ Employment
/ Expectations
/ Friendship
/ Generations
/ High schools
/ Hispanic Americans
/ Hispanics
/ Human capital
/ Identity
/ Identity formation
/ Illegal immigrants
/ Immigrants
/ Immigration policy
/ Incorporation
/ Interviews
/ Labor market
/ Latin American cultural groups
/ Latin Americans
/ Learning
/ Legal Problems
/ Legal status
/ Legal System
/ Life Stage Transitions
/ Life transitions
/ Maturity (Individuals)
/ Mobility
/ Noncitizens
/ Parents
/ Participation
/ Public schools
/ Resilience (Psychology)
/ Roles
/ School systems
/ Self Actualization
/ Skills
/ Smith, Robert
/ Social mobility
/ Social relations
/ Social skills
/ Society
/ Sociocultural Patterns
/ Socioeconomic status
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of the family. Age groups
/ Students
/ Transformation
/ U.S.A
/ Undocumented Immigrants
/ Upward mobility
/ Young Adults
/ Youth problems
2011
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Learning to Be Illegal: Undocumented Youth and Shifting Legal Contexts in the Transition to Adulthood
by
Gonzales, Roberto G.
in
Acculturation
/ Adjustment (to Environment)
/ Adolescence
/ Adolescent Attitudes
/ Adolescents
/ Adulthood
/ Adults
/ Age
/ Aspirations
/ Assimilation
/ California
/ Child development
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Colleges & universities
/ Coming of age
/ Context Effect
/ Coping
/ Education
/ Educational attainment
/ Employment
/ Expectations
/ Friendship
/ Generations
/ High schools
/ Hispanic Americans
/ Hispanics
/ Human capital
/ Identity
/ Identity formation
/ Illegal immigrants
/ Immigrants
/ Immigration policy
/ Incorporation
/ Interviews
/ Labor market
/ Latin American cultural groups
/ Latin Americans
/ Learning
/ Legal Problems
/ Legal status
/ Legal System
/ Life Stage Transitions
/ Life transitions
/ Maturity (Individuals)
/ Mobility
/ Noncitizens
/ Parents
/ Participation
/ Public schools
/ Resilience (Psychology)
/ Roles
/ School systems
/ Self Actualization
/ Skills
/ Smith, Robert
/ Social mobility
/ Social relations
/ Social skills
/ Society
/ Sociocultural Patterns
/ Socioeconomic status
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of the family. Age groups
/ Students
/ Transformation
/ U.S.A
/ Undocumented Immigrants
/ Upward mobility
/ Young Adults
/ Youth problems
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
Learning to Be Illegal: Undocumented Youth and Shifting Legal Contexts in the Transition to Adulthood
by
Gonzales, Roberto G.
in
Acculturation
/ Adjustment (to Environment)
/ Adolescence
/ Adolescent Attitudes
/ Adolescents
/ Adulthood
/ Adults
/ Age
/ Aspirations
/ Assimilation
/ California
/ Child development
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Colleges & universities
/ Coming of age
/ Context Effect
/ Coping
/ Education
/ Educational attainment
/ Employment
/ Expectations
/ Friendship
/ Generations
/ High schools
/ Hispanic Americans
/ Hispanics
/ Human capital
/ Identity
/ Identity formation
/ Illegal immigrants
/ Immigrants
/ Immigration policy
/ Incorporation
/ Interviews
/ Labor market
/ Latin American cultural groups
/ Latin Americans
/ Learning
/ Legal Problems
/ Legal status
/ Legal System
/ Life Stage Transitions
/ Life transitions
/ Maturity (Individuals)
/ Mobility
/ Noncitizens
/ Parents
/ Participation
/ Public schools
/ Resilience (Psychology)
/ Roles
/ School systems
/ Self Actualization
/ Skills
/ Smith, Robert
/ Social mobility
/ Social relations
/ Social skills
/ Society
/ Sociocultural Patterns
/ Socioeconomic status
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of the family. Age groups
/ Students
/ Transformation
/ U.S.A
/ Undocumented Immigrants
/ Upward mobility
/ Young Adults
/ Youth problems
2011
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Learning to Be Illegal: Undocumented Youth and Shifting Legal Contexts in the Transition to Adulthood
Journal Article
Learning to Be Illegal: Undocumented Youth and Shifting Legal Contexts in the Transition to Adulthood
2011
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Overview
This article examines the transition to adulthood among 1.5-generation undocumented Latino young adults. For them, the transition to adulthood involves exiting the legally protected status of K to 12 students and entering into adult roles that require legal status as the basis for participation. This collision among contexts makes for a turbulent transition and has profound implications for identity formation, friendship patterns, aspirations and expectations, and social and economic mobility. Undocumented children move from protected to unprotected, from inclusion to exclusion, from de facto legal to illegal. In the process, they must learn to be illegal, a transformation that involves the almost complete retooling of daily routines, survival skills, aspirations, and social patterns. These findings have important implications for studies of the 1.5- and second-generations and the specific and complex ways in which legal status intervenes in their coming of age. The article draws on 150 interviews with undocumented 1.5-generation young adult Latinos in Southern California.
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