Hispanic Children:
The Rise of the Second Generation
Washington, DC [CapitalWirePR] May 28, 2009 - The Pew Hispanic
Center, a project of the Pew Research Center, today released a report that
finds that Hispanics now make up more than one-in-five of all children in the
United States - up from 9% in 1980 -- and as their numbers have grown, their demographic
profile has changed.
More than half of the nation's 16 million Hispanic children are now "second
generation," meaning they are the U.S.-born sons or daughters of at least
one foreign-born parent, typically someone who came to this country in the
immigration wave from Mexico, Central America and South America that began
around 1980. In 1980, a majority of Latino children were "third or higher
generation" -- the U.S.-born sons or daughters of U.S.-born parents.
A Pew Hispanic Center analysis of U.S. Census data indicates that many social,
economic and demographic characteristics of Latino children vary by their
generational status. First and second generation Latino children are less
likely than third or higher generation children to be fluent in English and to
have parents who completed high school. They are more likely to live in
poverty. But they are less likely than third or higher generation Latino
children to live in single parent households.
Another characteristic that separates Latino children along generational lines
is their legal status. Building on earlier research, the Pew Hispanic Center
estimates that fewer than one-in-ten of all Hispanic children are unauthorized
immigrants. However, about one quarter have one or more parents who is an unauthorized immigrant.
Pew Hispanic Center population projections indicate that the generational
composition of Hispanic children will change yet again between now and 2025.
The share of Hispanic children who are second generation is projected to peak
soon, while the share of Hispanic children who are third generation or higher
will begin to rise in the coming decade.
The report, "Latino
Children: A Majority Are U.S.-Born Offspring of Immigrants", authored by Richard
Fry, Senior Research Associate, Pew Hispanic Center, and Jeffrey S. Passel,
Senior Demographer, Pew Hispanic Center, is available at the Pew Hispanic
Center's website, www.pewhispanic.org.
About the Pew Hispanic Center
The Pew Hispanic Center,
a project of the Pew Research Center [link: http://www.pewresearch.org/ ] , is a non-advocacy research
organization based in Washington, DC and is funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts
[link: http://www.pewtrusts.org/ ].
CONTACT:
Daniel Dockterman
info@pewhispanic.org
202-419-3637
Paul Fucito
pfucito@pewresearch.org
202-419-4372
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