A photo of Christopher Salas-Wright

Newly hired professor Christopher Salas-Wright is working to develop strategies that social workers, civic leaders, and educators can use to help migrants make the most of their new lives in the wake of natural disasters and political crises. Photo by Peter Julian.

After Hurricane Maria in September 2017, killing nearly 3,000 people and causing $100 billion in damage, Christopher Salas-Wright interviewed dozens of residents of the island who had been forced to flee to the mainland.聽

Salas-Wright, a researcher who studies the social, cultural, and economic challenges that face immigrants, wanted to know how Puerto Rican migrants had adapted to their new lives. How, he asked a group of migrants who had moved to Florida, had people on the mainland treated them? How had they made ends meet? And how had they managed to remain mentally strong after the catastrophic storm had upended their lives?

鈥淚t was deeply moving to hear their experiences and see families that have to suddenly scramble to put their lives back together,鈥 says Salas-Wright, a newly hired professor in the Boston College School of Social Work who joined the faculty in July. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 sit in those kinds of meetings with people and not feel that you have a responsibility to use science to make a real impact on communities.鈥澛

Over the next three years, Salas-Wright plans to follow a cohort of 1,000 parents and children who moved to the mainland in the wake of Hurricane Maria. He says the is to develop strategies that social workers, civic leaders, and educators can use to help migrants make the most of their new lives, especially those who havein response to trauma caused by the forced displacement from their homes.聽

鈥淭he hope is that this will be a unique study of Hurricane Maria survivors in the United States,鈥 says Salas-Wright, whose research project is funded by the . 鈥淚鈥檓 unaware of any other study of its scope that will have the chance to follow people to understand how their experiences unfold over time.鈥

To have encounters with people on the margins and to reflect on those experiences in ways that draw on the heart, mind, and faith have led to the work I do today. It鈥檚 impossible for me to make sense of the world around me without thinking of migration.
Christopher Salas-Wright, professor

His education at two Jesuit institutions鈥擲anta Clara University and Boston College鈥攈as shaped his research agenda.聽

As an undergraduate at Santa Clara in 2000, Salas-Wright spent a summer in a rural community in Chalatenango, El Salvador, which had been . He recalls that violence, inequality, and mass migration had touched the lives of every family he encountered. His , completed in the Boston College School of Social Work in 2012, focused on the relationship between spirituality and delinquency, violence, and substance abuse among young people involved in gangs in El Salvador.

鈥淭o have encounters with people on the margins and to reflect on those experiences in ways that draw on the heart, mind, and faith have led to the work I do today,鈥 says Salas-Wright. 鈥淚t鈥檚 impossible for me to make sense of the world around me without thinking of migration.鈥

His newest study, for which he is seeking funding, will focus on migrants from Venezuela who have from a political, social, and economic crisis in their country. More than 1 million such people have crossed over into Colombia to escape widespread violence, hyperinflation, and a healthcare system on the verge of collapse.

The primary objective of this research project mirrors the goal of his project that took shape in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria: To develop long-term solutions to help migrants who have been forced to leave their home, their culture, and their language.聽

鈥淚t鈥檚 so hard under the best conditions to put together a good life,鈥 says Salas-Wright. 鈥淲e need to figure out what we can do as social workers to try to help communities thrive.鈥

Salas-Wright comes to 极速六合官方网址 from Boston University, where he served as an associate professor in the School of Social Work. He鈥檚 authored more than 175 publications, including peer-reviewed articles in the American Journal of Public Health, the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, and Drug and Alcohol Dependence. In 2019, he received the from the Society for Social Work and Research, an honor that recognizes young scholars whose innovative work has attracted the attention of other academics and influenced the field.聽

His research findings have appeared in numerous media outlets, including , , and . One of his studies, published in 2015, revealed that teenaged immigrants are less likely than their native-born peers to engage in delinquent behaviors, such as fighting, selling drugs, and carrying guns.

鈥淒espite greater social disadvantages compared to U.S.-born Americans,鈥 Salas-Wright told N极速六合官方网址 News at the time, 鈥渋mmigrants tend to be less involved in problem behavior such as violence and crime and misuse of alcohol and drugs.鈥

He says he looks forward to collaborating with students and faculty across the School of Social Work, including those who focus on improving the lives of immigrants, refugees, and people in Latinx communities.聽

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to imagine a school that鈥檚 a better fit for me,鈥 says Salas-Wright, who speaks fluent Spanish. 鈥淚 had positive experiences at other institutions, but this is the first time where clusters of faculty are very much aligned with my own work, which will allow for a very unique opportunity for training and research.鈥