Revisiting the Hispanic Paradox: Neighborhood Characteristics and Life Satisfaction for Older Immigrants
Morgan Stangl, Lauren Gil Hayes, Yi Wang, Man Guo

TL;DR
The study finds that neighborhood characteristics strongly influence life satisfaction for older Hispanic immigrants, offering new insights into the Hispanic Paradox.
Contribution
This study reveals that foreign-born Hispanics are more sensitive to neighborhood cohesion and disorder than native-born individuals, adding a new dimension to the Hispanic Paradox.
Findings
Foreign-born middle-aged/older adults show a stronger association between neighborhood characteristics and life satisfaction.
Neighborhood cohesion is strongly linked to higher life satisfaction for foreign-born Hispanics.
Neighborhood disorder is strongly linked to lower life satisfaction for foreign-born Hispanics.
Abstract
Nativity status (foreign-born, FB vs. native-born, NB) is a social determinant of well-being, yet its impact on life satisfaction may vary depending on neighborhood characteristics. Current literature discusses the Hispanic Paradox, where FB Hispanics report higher life satisfaction despite immigration challenges, attributed to strong family support. However, neighborhood characteristics remains underexamined, offering new insights. The current study seeks to explore 1) Whether the association between neighborhood characteristics (cohesion/disorder) and life satisfaction is stronger for FB middle-aged/older adults than for NB middle-aged/older adults and 2) if this association varies by race (White, Black, Hispanic). This study utilizes data from the 2018 Health and Retirement Study (HRS) Psychosocial Leave-Behind Questionnaire, a nationally representative survey of middle-aged/older…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRacial and Ethnic Identity Research · Health disparities and outcomes · Urban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies
