Service Needs, Context of Reception, and Perceived Discrimination of Venezuelan Immigrants in the United States and Colombia

Author:

Scaramutti CarolinaORCID,Schmidt Renae Danielle,Ochoa Lucas Gregorio,Brown Eric Christopher,Vos Saskia Renee,Mejia Trujillo Juliana,Perez Gomez Nicolas Augusto1,Salas-Wright Christopher2,Duque Maria,Schwartz Seth3

Affiliation:

1. University of Miami Miller School of Medicine

2. Boston College

3. The University of Texas at Austin

Abstract

Executive Summary Millions of Venezuelans have fled their country in hopes for a better future outside the political and financial turmoil in their home country. This paper examines the self-reported needs of Venezuelans in the United States and Colombia. Specifically, it looks at perceived discrimination in each country and its effect on the service needs of Venezuelan immigrants. The authors used data from a larger project conducted in October to November 2017 to perform a qualitative content analysis on the specific services that participants and others like them would need following immigration. The sample consisted of 647 Venezuelan immigrant adults who had migrated to the United States ( n = 342) or Colombia ( n = 305). Its findings indicate statistically significant differences between the two countries. Venezuelan immigrants in the United States were more likely to identity mental health and educational service needs, while those in Colombia were more likely to list access to healthcare, help finding jobs, and food assistance. When looking at perceived discrimination, means scores for discrimination were significantly greater for participants who indicated needing housing services, who indicated needing assistance enrolling children in school and who indicated needing food assistance, compared to participants who did not list those needs. Venezuelans who had experienced greater negative context of reception were less likely to indicate needing mental health services, where 11.9 percent of those who did not perceive a negative context of reception responded that they needed mental health services. Evaluating existing service networks will be essential in working to bridge the gap between the services provided to and requested by Venezuelans. Collaboration between diverse government actors, community-based organizations (CBOs) and other stakeholders can help identify gaps in existing service networks. CBOs can also facilitate communication between Venezuelan immigrants and their new communities, on the need to invest in necessary services.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference45 articles.

1. Ayón Cecilia. 2018. “‘Vivimos En Jaula De Oro’: The Impact of State-Level Legislation on Immigrant Latino Families: Semantic Scholar.” Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies 16:351–71. https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/%E2%80%9CVivimos-en-Jaula-de-Oro%E2%80%9D%3A-The-Impact-of-on-Latino-Ay%C3%B3n/8838f221381ab0f74973dcfd20bf6e357ecb745a.

2. Service Needs among Latino Immigrant Families: Implications for Social Work Practice

3. Bahar Dany, Dooley Meagan. 2019. “Venezuela Refugee Crisis to Become the Largest and Most Underfunded in Modern History.” Brookings Commentary, December 9. https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2019/12/09/venezuela-refugee-crisis-to-become-the-largest-and-most-underfunded-in-modern-history/ (accessed March 9, 2022).

4. Perceiving pervasive discrimination among African Americans: Implications for group identification and well-being.

5. Teaching the analysis of textual data: an experiential approach

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