Research
°®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Immigration Enforcement Experiences Project
The °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Immigration Enforcement Experiences Project is a qualitative research study conducted by researchers at the Im/migrant Well-Being Research Center (IWRC) at the °®ÎÛ´«Ã½. This research was funded by the Sociological Initiatives Foundation, the °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Humanities Institute, and the USF College of Arts and Sciences Centers and Institutes. The study builds on the Center’s °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ Immigration Policies Project by conducting in-depth interviews to understand how recent changes in state and federal immigration enforcement are shaping the daily lives of immigrants and their families.
Study Goals
Primary Objective
To document how intensified state and federal immigration enforcement—stemming from °®ÎÛ´«Ã½â€™s SB 1718 and recent presidential executive orders—affects the well-being of immigrants and their US-born children across multiple areas of daily life. The following themes emerged from our data:
- Work and participation in the economy
- Housing and US settlement
- Fear of family separation and social isolation
- Relations with law enforcement
- Detention and its lingering effects
- Health and healthcare access
- Children’s education and mental well-being
- Resilience, resistance, and community bonds
Between May and July 2025, the research team conducted 53 semi-structured interviews
with immigrants and US-born adult children of immigrants. Participants ranged in age
from 18 to 65 and represented regions including Africa, the Caribbean, South America, Central America, and North America. Their legal statuses also varied, including undocumented immigrants, people with
temporary protections (e.g. Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals (DACA)), Lawful Permanent Residents, and US citizens.
Key Findings from the Interviews
- Work has become more precarious, with many immigrants abandoning seasonal jobs or shifting into informal, low-wage work closer to home.
- Housing and settlement choices are shaped by enforcement, leading families to double up, reduce mobility, or consider leaving °®ÎÛ´«Ã½ altogether.
- Fear and surveillance permeate daily life, affecting how people drive, worship, and socialize and often resulting in social isolation.
- Trust in law enforcement has eroded, with many immigrants avoiding police even in emergencies due to fear of exposure to immigration authorities.
- Detention experiences carry long-lasting harm, including reports of abuse, trauma, and ongoing psychological distress after release, even among US citizens.
- Health and healthcare use are declining, as immigrants and their US-citizen relatives avoid hospitals out of fear that seeking care could attract enforcement.
- Children and youth are taking on adult responsibilities, including driving parents, translating, and monitoring police presence, often at the expense of their education and emotional well-being.
- Faith communities, families, and mutual aid groups remain essential sources of resilience and support.
Deliverables
The full qualitative report is available in:
- Spanish
A One-Pager summarizing key findings is available in:
A Narrative Toolkit, designed for policymakers, educators, journalists, and service providers, is available in: