Strengths and resilience of migrant women in transit An analysis of the narratives of Central American women in irregular transit through Mexico towards the United States.
Strengths and resilience of migrant women in transit An analysis of the narratives of Central American women in irregular transit through Mexico towards the United States.
Abstract
This study departed from the idea that all people, including those hardest hit by adversity,
have strengths and resiliencies. It posed the question on how a particularly vulnerable group,
Central American migrant women in irregular transit through Mexico, used their strengths and
resilience to reach the border with the United States. Past research has failed to address the issue
of strengths and resilience in Central American migrant women; instead, much attention has been
placed on the risks and vulnerabilities of this group. This research started from the strengths
perspective and resilience theories to address the issue of skills and abilities of migrant women in
transit through Mexico. Specifically, it was about discovering the women’s strengths, knowing
how they used them to face and overcome the adversities of the journey and how they made sense
of them. For this purpose, 10 narrative interviews were conducted in the Mexican border city of
Tijuana, and micro ethnographic work was done with these women. The results of this research
indicated that these migrant women are possessors of internal and external strengths, the firsts are
related to their religious beliefs, courage, endurance and goal setting; and the seconds with the
support received from people, institutions and their families. It was concluded that thanks to the
combination of all these strengths, these women were able to successfully reach the border with
the United States.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2018-07-25Author
Lemus Way, Mayra Carolina
Keywords
transit migration, female migration, resilience, strengths perspective
Language
eng