As part of the Young Children in
Black Immigrant Families initiative, Chapin Hall set out to examine the experiences, parenting practices, and characteristics of black immigrant mothers in Palm Beach County, Florida.
As part of the Young Children in
Black Immigrant Families initiative, Chapin Hall set out to examine the experiences, parenting practices, and characteristics o...
Kevin J.A. Thomas, Pennsylvania State University, «Parental Education — Occupation Mismatch Status and Child Poverty in
Black Immigrant Families»
Not exact matches
Activists from the movements for
Black lives,
immigrant rights, Muslim freedom, and others protesting to save their lives, protect their
families, or defend their environment and land can't wait for data protection.
Or the low - income kids turn out to be somehow atypical — they go to a selective school with an entrance exam, or they're recent
immigrants from Asia or Eastern Europe rather than
black or Latino kids from
families with long poverty histories.
Whereas, Mr. Paladino acknowledged that he made these statements; And, Mr. Paladino is an elected official charged with the responsibility to represent children and
families in a district comprised of over 70 %
Black, Brown, Asian,
Immigrant and other minority students and
families; And, Mr. Paladino took an oath to ensure that students are afforded an environment which is free from fear and respects diversity within the school district and the community and is subject to all district policies; And,
Working
Families Party, NOW - NYC, New York
Immigrant Action Fund (the 501c4 arm of the NY Immigration Coalition), VOCAL - NY Action Fund, Make the Road Action, Citizens Union, Rev. Dr. A.R. Bernard, Bertha Lewis (Executive Director of the
Black Institute), former Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz
Working
Families Party, NOW - NYC, New York
Immigrant Action Fund (the 501c4 arm of the NY Immigration Coalition), VOCAL - NY Action Fund, Make the Road Action, Citizens Union, Rev. Dr. A.R. Bernard, Bertha Lewis (Executive Director of the
Black Institute), former Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, Gloria Steinem.
Wanting to see for himself, Mike visits his local elementary school in Takoma Park, Maryland, where «the children of übereducated whites» are in the same classrooms as poor
blacks,
black middle - class
families» and «poor
immigrant children from Latin America, Ethiopia, and Eritrea.»
Piney Branch Elementary serves an incredibly diverse group of 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders, from the children of übereducated white and
black middle - class
families, to poor
immigrant children from Latin America, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, to low - income African American kids.
(Then again, many of those
families are
Black, Hispanic, and new
immigrants, and we all know how particularly
Except for
Black children, Mexican, Asian, and White children in
immigrant families are less likely to use center - based care compared to their counterparts in non-
immigrant families.
Filled with a cast of unforgettable characters more richly drawn than any Lehane has ever created, The Given Day tells the story of two
families — one
black, one white — swept up in a maelstrom of revolutionaries and anarchists,
immigrants and ward bosses, Brahmins and ordinary citizens, all engaged in a battle for survival and power.
We work with caucasian, African American, men and women of color,
black, mixed - race and inter-racial couples and
families, latino, hispanic, Asian American (Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Japanese, Philippine), Asian Indian, Native American, Arab,
immigrants, Jewish (orthodox, conservative and reform), Muslim, Christian, Hindu, Hinduism, Hindi, Buddhist as well as agnostic and atheist clients.
-- Gay Men Lesbians Bisexuals Transgender Adolescents Transgender Men Transgender Women Genderqueer / Non-Binary Adults Gender Non - Conforming / Gender Creative Children / Adolescents Parents of GLBTQ Children Men Women Older Adults Adolescents Infants / Pre-schoolers Elementary / School - Aged Children Middle School / Pre-teens Young Adults Middle Aged Adults Parents Childfree Adults
Immigrants Refugees African - American /
Black Latino / Latina / Latinx / Hispanic Southeast Asian Asian / Pacific Islander Arab / Middle Eastern Mixed Race Adoptees Foster Children Foster Parents Christian Muslim Jewish Buddhist Hindu Atheist / Agnostic Spiritual New Age Indigenous / Traditional Religion Military First Responders (Police, Paramedic, Fire Fighter, etc.) Disabled / People with Disabilities Mixed - Orientation Couples Mixed Religion Couples Mixed Race / Cross-Cultural Couples Homeless Adults Homeless Children /
Families Working Class / Blue Collar / Tradespeople White Collar Workers Therapists / Counselors
After adjustment for confounders, the stratum - specific adjusted odds ratios (95 % CI) of child mental health conditions related to a one - level decline in parent mental health were: 1.44 (1.35 — 1.55) for non-Hispanic whites, 1.24 (1.06 — 1.46) for non-Hispanic
blacks, 1.04 (0.81 — 1.32) for Hispanics from non-
immigrant families, 1.21 (0.96 — 1.93) for Hispanics from
immigrant families, and 1.43 (1.21 — 1.70) for non-Hispanic otherrace children.