Skip to main content

ASU lecturer cited in article about effects on children detained at the US-Mexico border


Illustration by Madison Pennisi/The State Press

July 10, 2018

While the policies for separating children from their parents or guardians at the U.S.-Mexico border have recently changed, there are still many concerns about the short- and long-term effects suffered by thousands of detained children. 

Robert Weigand, principal lecturer at Arizona State University’s T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics, and the director of the Child Development Laboratory, weighs in on the topic in a recent article by The State Press’ Jessica Myers.

In an email, Weigand said that one of the most threatening and frightening things one can do to a young child is forcibly separate them from their parent. See more from Weigand in the full article.

Article source: The State Press

More ASU in the news

 

ASU makes progress toward establishing new medical school, could admit students by 2026

How to Make Urban Agriculture More Climate-Friendly

An ASU professor is cracking open the weirdly profitable world of criminal bug smuggling