Garcia, Ginny Elizabeth (2008-08). An american irony: the story of Mexican immigrant poverty in the land of immigrants. Doctoral Dissertation. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • This dissertation uses data from the 2006 American Community Survey and
    Decennial Census 2000 to analyze trends and determinants of poverty among Mexican
    Americans and Mexican immigrants in the Southwestern United States. The chapters
    include: 1) an Introduction; 2) a Literature Review with sub-sections on many issues
    related to these populations; 3) a discussion of Data and Methods including a section on
    the Development of a Proxy Variable for Undocumented Status; 4) Results for Mexican
    Americans (Individual Level); 5) Results for Mexican Immigrants (Individual Level); 6)
    Multilevel Results; and 7) Conclusions and Future Research Directions. The
    introduction and literature review will provide a background and overview of the
    research, as well as the analysis of poverty at the individual and contextual level (i.e. the
    Super-PUMA level). Data and methods are then discussed relative to all the analyses to
    be undertaken in the dissertation. In addition, specific emphasis in this chapter will be
    placed on the methodology pertaining to the development of the undocumented proxy
    variable. In Chapter IV data are analyzed at the individual level through the use of
    logistic regression. Special attention is placed on variables pertaining to ethnicity, citizenship status, and years spent in the US, among others, in order to predict the
    likelihood of Mexican Americans being in extreme poverty, one hundred percent
    poverty, and low-income. The focus is then narrowed in Chapter V to Mexican
    immigrants with special attention given to the effect on poverty of undocumented status.
    In Chapter VI, independent variables at the contextual level are used to predict poverty
    in conjunction with those used at the individual level; these include the percentage of
    persons in poverty, concentration of Mexican immigrants, and the relative presence of
    various industries. The findings confirm that both individual level and contextual level
    predictors are key in the determination of poverty for Mexican Americans and
    immigrants. In the conclusion, discussion is given to the fact that many studies have
    focused on the individual level predictors of poverty; this research goes one step further
    in that it examines poverty not only with respect to individual predictors, but also group
    level variables.

ETD Chair

  • Poston, Dudley  George T. and Gladys H. Abell Professor of Liberal Arts

publication date

  • August 2008