immigrant families - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 14 Mar 2016 07:18:27 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg immigrant families - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 US bishops support calls to keep immigrant families together https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/03/15/us-bishops-support-calls-keep-immigrant-families-together/ Mon, 14 Mar 2016 16:02:08 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=81285

American Catholic bishops joined various faith groups in calling on the US Supreme Court to give temporary relief to undocumented persons in the country who are eligible for deportation. "Courts have repeatedly recognized that there is a public interest in maintaining stable families and communities," the bishops said in an amicus brief filed on March Read more

US bishops support calls to keep immigrant families together... Read more]]>
American Catholic bishops joined various faith groups in calling on the US Supreme Court to give temporary relief to undocumented persons in the country who are eligible for deportation.

"Courts have repeatedly recognized that there is a public interest in maintaining stable families and communities," the bishops said in an amicus brief filed on March 8.

"Family unification is an integral consideration in the application of immigration law," read the brief. It said that children can suffer "emotional and social harm" resulting from the deportation and even detention of their parents.

in "extreme cases," families can break up entirely with the children going into foster care. "The impact on children here could not be clearer," the brief said, adding that fear of deportation also drives families away from public spaces, and thus harms the public interest.

The administration of President Barack Obama has earlier issued the "Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents that delayed the deportation of millions of undocumented people in the United States.

The action granted parents with children born in the US, and thus citizens or lawful permanent residents by birthright, a stay on their deportation if they met certain conditions like having lived in the US for at least five years.

Sources

Catholic News Agency
Angelus News
Independent Catholic News
Catholic News Service/catholicphilly.com
Image: CNA

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The traditional American family has been outsourced https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/09/27/traditional-american-family-outsourced/ Thu, 26 Sep 2013 19:12:04 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=50111

If you're looking for a two-parent, man-and-wife, never-divorced kind of family, head to one of those citizenship ceremonies. If you want to find traditional American family values—a man and a woman officially married to one of their "own kind," no plans for divorce, an older dad who is the breadwinner, a stay-at-home mom—the best place Read more

The traditional American family has been outsourced... Read more]]>
If you're looking for a two-parent, man-and-wife, never-divorced kind of family, head to one of those citizenship ceremonies.

If you want to find traditional American family values—a man and a woman officially married to one of their "own kind," no plans for divorce, an older dad who is the breadwinner, a stay-at-home mom—the best place to look is … in immigrant families.

That's one of several themes running through a new report, "Divergent Paths of American Families," compiled by Zhenchao Qian, a sociologist at The Ohio State University. Qian began work on the US2010 research project looking to see if a "quieting" of change in family dynamics, first noticed in 1990s, had continued into the new century and through the turmoil of the Great Recession.

Depending on where you looked, family life in the U.S. had stabilized. And depending on where you looked, change was accelerating. The typical family had become, well, atypical.

"The state of American families has become increasingly polarized," a release on the study quoted Qian. "Race and ethnicity, education, economics, and immigration status are increasingly linked to how well families fare."

One of the most salient divergences lay between immigrants and the native-born, and what quieting could be found could often be attributed to immigrants. By 2010, the end point of Qian's decade-long study period, immigrants made up 13 percent of the U.S. population. Those immigrants brought the customs of their various homelands with them, weird practices like getting married regardless of their income and staying married through thick and thin. (It's true in Britain, too.)

Here are some other ways in which immigrants differ:

• At every age, they married at a higher level than U.S. natives, regardless of ethnic similarity. Asian immigrants, for example, were twice as like to ever marry as U.S.-born Asians.

• Immigrant women marry at a much younger age than do immigrant men. Hence, among those in the mid to late 20s, 62 percent of women were married but only 43 percent of men.

• Immigrant man and wife were more likely to be ethnically or racially the same compared to the U.S. average. Continue reading

Sources

The traditional American family has been outsourced]]>
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