President's Report Masthead
September 30, 2017

A sense of belonging

Oscar Gil-García’s research on individuals and families affected by immigration policies is personal.

“Living in a ‘mixed-status family’ comes with certain experiences and, ultimately, the fear of deportations,” says Gil-García, an assistant professor of human development in the College of Community and Public Affairs (CCPA).

“Mixed-status” means family members have different legal statuses, including citizenship.

“My parents and many of my family members did not have legal status as American citizens, which meant they had to take jobs that paid less than minimum wage,” says Gil-García, who was born in New York City where, as a child, he observed immigration agents raid and deport family members at home. “It also required me to step up to the plate and help out economically.”

Gil-García studies forced migration through policy analysis and fieldwork. For more than a decade he has worked with indigenous Mayans from Guatemala who fled to Mexico in the 1980s to escape military conflict. More than 43,000 indigenous Mayans established settlement camps throughout southern Mexico. He conducts research in the largest of these settlements, specifically within La Gloria, located near the border of Guatemala.

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