Rodriguez, NeĢstorRoberts, Bryan R., 1939-2015-10-262018-01-222015-10-262018-01-222015-05May 2015http://hdl.handle.net/2152/31945textThe focus of this thesis is on male, Salvadoran deportees, aged 20-35, who after spending their formative years in the United States, are faced with the task of reintegrating into Salvadoran society. Overall, Salvadoran males account for 90% of detainees and deportees to El Salvador (UCA, 2015). Through this sample, I explore the experience of young deportees in the growing call-center sector, and explore the consequences of gendered, transnational narratives, and the impact of deportations on their identity. The backdrop for this study is El Salvador's growing call-center industry, as this is the site where I interviewed participants, and one that was continuously framed as a site of criminality by local Salvadorans. The way young deportees maintain bonds with their former communities in the United States, perform their identities, and self-identify can greatly influence the manner in which they interact with Salvadorans in their new society. Consequently, these former aspects can greatly affect how deportees reconstruct their lives in a foreign context.application/pdfenMigrationDeportationEl SalvadorCentral America1.5 generationYoung migrantsExileDiasporaForced into exile : conflicts of space, gender and identity among young Salvadoran deporteesThesis2015-10-26