Yes, many will move into similar socio-economic environments but also environments with more English, more varied backgrounds etc. This will hopefully allow many to move on from the debacle of the Dominican American experience.
Can someone elaborate on this?
I am Canadian, and there are not so many Dominican immigrants in Canada.
We have lots of immigrants in general, and some Latino ones: Chileans, Cubans, a few Mexicans, El Salvadore?os… they seem to fare pretty well in my country.
I've only ever met one Dominican immigrant in Canada, I will never ever forget him, a mulato sankie named Americo who couldn't even write his own name, married to an obese Canadian woman who had kicked him out of the house for cheating.
He came into my office and burst into tears because his mother had died and he couldn't afford to go back to the DR for the funeral.
A sad, wretched man with a big poof of hair. But that's it.
So what is the debacle of the Dominican-American experience?
I've met a few deportees here who range from together enough (you'd never think) to absolute messes… What seems to go wrong for them in the USA?