Jacqueline Hagan
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Chilean-born American sociologist.
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Sociology
Jacqueline Hagan's Degrees
- PhD Sociology University of California, Berkeley
- Masters Sociology University of California, Berkeley
- Bachelors Sociology University of California, Berkeley
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Why Is Jacqueline Hagan Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Jacqueline Maria Hagan is a Chilean-born American sociologist who has been the Kenan Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill since 2017. She is known for her research on immigration from Latin America to the United States, and on the effects of the United States' immigration policies on immigrants. This work has included studies of the social effects of deportations of undocumented immigrants to their home countries, and research on changes in the frequency of different causes of migrant deaths along the Mexico–United States border.
Jacqueline Hagan's Published Works
Published Works
- Social networks gender and immigrant incorporation: resources and constraints. (1998) (620)
- Acculturative Stress Among Documented and Undocumented Latino Immigrants in the United States (2010) (352)
- Calling upon the Sacred: Migrants’ Use of Religion in the Migration Process (2003) (237)
- U.S. Deportation Policy, Family Separation, and Circular Migration (2008) (215)
- Death at the border. (1999) (211)
- Social effects of mass deportations by the United States government, 2000–10 (2011) (179)
- The Effects of Recent Welfare and Immigration Reforms on Immigrants’ Access to Health Care 1 (2003) (145)
- Fractured Families and Communities: Effects of Immigration Reform in Texas, Mexico, and El Salvador (2004) (116)
- The Effects of U.S. Deportation Policies on Immigrant Families and Communities: Cross-Border Perspectives (2010) (96)
- The structure and functions of cell group ministry in a Korean Christian Church (1997) (77)
- Brutal Borders? Examining the Treatment of Deportees During Arrest and Detention (2006) (69)
- Deciding to Be Legal: A Maya Community in Houston (1997) (67)
- Skills on the Move (2011) (60)
- The Gender Division of Labor and Family Change in Industrial Societies: A Theoretical Accounting (1996) (59)
- Deporting Fathers: Involuntary Transnational Families and Intent to Remigrate among Salvadoran Deportees 1 (2016) (54)
- Deporting social capital: Implications for immigrant communities in the United States. (2015) (47)
- Implementing the U.S. legalization program: the influence of immigrant communities and local agencies on immigration policy reform (1993) (40)
- New Skills, New Jobs: Return Migration, Skill Transfers, and Business Formation in Mexico. (2016) (38)
- Brutality at the border? Use of force in the arrest of immigrants in the United States (2002) (32)
- BORDER BLUNDERS: THE UNANTICIPATED HUMAN AND ECONOMIC COSTS OF THE U.S. APPROACH TO IMMIGRATION CONTROL, 1986‐2007 (2008) (32)
- Return Migration Around the World: An Integrated Agenda for Future Research (2020) (30)
- Contextualizing Immigrant Labor Market Incorporation (2004) (30)
- Skills on the Move: Rethinking the Relationship Between Human Capital and Immigrant Economic Mobility * (2013) (26)
- Death at the Border 1 (1999) (22)
- Skills of the "Unskilled": Work and Mobility among Mexican Migrants (2015) (22)
- Making Theological Sense of the Migration Journey From Latin America (2006) (21)
- Revealing Talent: Informal Skills Intermediation as an Emergent Pathway to Immigrant Labor Market Incorporation (2010) (19)
- Negotiating Social Membership in the Contemporary World (2006) (15)
- Fear of Immigration Enforcement Among Older Latino Immigrants in the United States (2017) (15)
- Deaths During Undocumented Migration: Trends and Policy Implications in the New Era of Homeland security (2016) (15)
- Religion as Psychological, Spiritual, and Social Support in the Migration Undertaking (2016) (14)
- Community Life (1996) (11)
- Migration Miracle (2012) (10)
- A longitudinal analysis of resource mobilisation among forced and voluntary return migrants in Mexico (2019) (9)
- Identifying and Measuring the Lifelong Human Capital of “Unskilled” Migrants in the Mexico-US Migratory Circuit 1 (2014) (7)
- The Politics of Immigrant Rights: Between Political Geography and Transnational Interventions (2017) (5)
- Skills and job commitment in high technology industries in the US (1988) (4)
- Faith for the journey: Religion as a resource for migrants (2008) (4)
- The human costs of border enforcement (1996) (3)
- Family Matters: Claiming Rights across the US-Mexico Migratory System (2018) (3)
- How local community context shapes labour market re-entry and resource mobilisation among return migrants: an examination of rural and urban communities in Mexico (2020) (3)
- Chapter 12: Houston Heights (1998) (3)
- Implementing the U.S. Legalization Program: The Influence of Immigrant Communities and Local Agencies on Immigration Policy Reform 1 (1993) (2)
- Crossing Borders: Transnational Sanctuary, Social Justice, and the Church (2012) (2)
- Houston Heights (1999) (2)
- US Polices to Restrict Immigration (2016) (2)
- Return Migration, Skill Transfers, and Entrepreneurship in Mexico: Implications for Local Development (2014) (1)
- Religion on the move (2012) (1)
- Cross-border Migration and Poverty: Evidence from the Kanchanaburi Demographic Surveillance System (KDSS), Thailand (2013) (1)
- 7. The Church vs. the State: Borders, Migrants, and Human Rights (2020) (0)
- Abusing Immigrants: An Analysis of Immigrant Enforcement and Mexican Migrant Claims of Human Rights Violations by Agents of the United States (2021) (0)
- Skills of the "Unskilled": Reconceptualizing the Relationship between Human Capital and the Economic Mobility of Migrants (2012) (0)
- Stress Among Documented and Undocumented Latino Immigrants in the United States (2010) (0)
- Return Migration and Social Mobility in Mexico (2019) (0)
- Social Forces' Century-Long Contributions to the Field of International Migration (2023) (0)
- 1. Who Are the “Unskilled,” Really? (2019) (0)
- Immigrants in the United States Acculturative Stress Among Documented and Undocumented Latino (2010) (0)
- The Role of the Mexican Consulate Network in Assisting Migrant Labor Claims across the U.S.-Mexico Migratory System (2021) (0)
- Immigration Enforcement, Older Latino Immigrants, and Implications for Health (2018) (0)
- Defining Skill : The Many Forms of Skilled Immigrant Labor (2016) (0)
- 5. Returning Home and Reintegrating into the Local Labor Market (2019) (0)
- 3. Mobilizing Skills and Migrating (2019) (0)
- 2. Learning Skills in Communities of Origin (2019) (0)
- 4. Transferring Skills, Reskilling, and Laboring in the United States (2019) (0)
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