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Introduction
With the emergence of informal housing came unregulated settlements that are regionally known as ‘colonias’. In the United States colonias are considered semi-rural subdivisions of substandard housing lacking basic physical infrastructure, potable water, sanitary sewage, and adequate roads. Colonias are unincorporated, unregulated, substandard settlements that are burdened by the lack of environmental protection Colonia communities do not have access to traditional homeownership financing methods and therefore consist of ramshackle housing units built incrementally with found material on expanses of undeveloped land Colonias have a predominant Latino population where 85 percent of those Latinos under the age of 18 are United States citizens. The U.S. has viewed border communities as a place of lawlessness, poverty, backwardness, and ethnic difference. Despite the economic development, liberalization and intensification of trade, and strategic geographic location the southern U.S. border is one of the poorest regions in the nation. Most cases have shown that these communities formed when unscrupulous land owners inappropriately subdivided rural lands, offered plots through a contract for deed, and made false promises that utilities would be installed.

The majority of these communities have no water infrastructures and lack wastewater or sewage services Where sewer systems do exist there are no treatment plants in the area and untreated wastewater is dumped into arroyos and creeks that flow into the Rio Grande or the Gulf of Mexico.

Colonias exist within the states of Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas with more than 1500 colonias identified within the U.S., and almost all of them are found in Texas. Evidence suggests that there are over 1800 designated colonias in the state of Texas, somewhere around 138 in New Mexico, about 77 in Arizona, and 32 in California These settlements are part of an informal sector or informal economy that is not bound by the structures of government regulations within labor, tax, health and safety, land use and environmental, civil rights, and immigration laws.

Section-916 of the National Affordable Housing Act (NAHA) defines colonias as any ‘identifiable community’ determined by an objective criteria that includes: the lack of potable water supply, and adequate sewage systems; the lack of decent, safe, and sanitary housing; and has been existent as a colonia before the date of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act. According to the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development the term colonias has a specific meaning within the U.S., referring to a community within the rural U.S.-Mexico border region with marginal conditions related to housing and infrastructure.

Etymology
The Spanish word colonia means a 'colony' or 'community'; in Mexican Spanish, it is specifically a 'residential quarter (of a city)', and a ‘colonia proletaria’ is a shantytown.[2] In Spanglish, the English-Spanish mix, colonia began to be used to refer primarily to Mexican neighborhoods about thirty years ago. A 1977 study uses the term "colonia" to describe rural desert settlements with inadequate infrastructure and unsafe housing stock.[3] Since these Hispanic neighborhoods were less affluent, the word also connoted poverty and substandard housing.[4] In the 1990s, colonias became a common American English name for the slums that developed on both sides of the U.S.–Mexican border.

The history of the word colonias in the United States, and its interpretation through politics suggest that places called colonias are not to be perceived as natural or prosperous communities. In many parts of Texas, Spanish-language terms are often used to frame and highlight class difference. The Term colonia is an essential symbol for public policy in the United States and this Spanish-language name is a critical component for constructing public and policy attention on unregulated, unincorporated subdivisions with poor physical infrastructure. The Spanish-language also underscores the settlements’ differences and labels them as racialized and distinct places, which has a powerful way of constructing and reinforcing marginality.

Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL)
A recent pilot study intended to document the personal and socioenvironmental correlates to health-related quality of life within Mexican American adults living in colonias found that colonia residents are worse off in terms of physical health compared to the U.S. average. By examining Mexican-Americans residing in Hidalgo County, Texas in the Lower Rio Grande Valley near the US-Mexican Border, investigators provide new knowledge for health professionals and policy makers in order to provide more effective preventive and medical services to underserved communities. The research provides statistical data and analysis as well as a discussion about the importance of a health-related quality of life. However, because the study is restricted to only Mexican American adults living in border colonias, further research is needed to substantiate these findings in a larger framework. As stated earlier this study is intended for health professionals and policy makers to focus on the need to provide preventive and medical services for underserved and underrepresented populations. Through this research investigators found that Mexican Americans living in colonias share similar mental health patterns compared to the U.S. average, but in terms of physical health they were worse off. Data collected through a household survey in 2002 and 2003 by the Integrated Health Outreach System Project (IHOS) was analyzed to describe the population in terms of sociodemographic status, HRQL, and other variables. In response to this survey 81% considered that access to health- care services was a problem; 62.5% mentioned housing; 76.5% perceived not having enough recreational and cultural activities; 86% perceived social issues; and 41.1% perceived physical environmental problems, specifically polluted air or water. In conclusion, the research provides significant data acknowledging health disparities colonia residents continuously face.

A report released on June 2010 by The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, claims there is enough data in the historical record that demonstrates a direct correlation between abated health outcomes, health disparities, and premature morbidity and mortality with ones zip code, which researchers have determined that for low-income and people of color can predetermine their life expectancy.

Alcohol use, Anxiety, Traumatic Stress, & Hopelessness
In a recent study, a community participatory model of a hundred Mexican origin colonia residents was used to investigate the relationship of alcohol use, acculturation, anxiety, hopelessness, and trauma. Investigators hypothesize that these symptoms are directly related to alcohol use disorders. Their results showed that participants who met the criteria for alcohol dependence showed more symptoms for anxiety and post-traumatic stress than the national average. Furthermore, investigators suggest that this study provides enough evidence to continue doing research as well as create awareness for future prevention and treatment programs that seek to improve the health of these individuals.

Investigators found that in Mexican American immigrants, lifetime prevalence for any anxiety disorder in men was 9% and 18% for women. For Mexican Americans born in the United States 27% of women and 20% of men met the criteria for anxiety disorders. Mexican Americans living in colonia have considerable health risks due to unsafe healthy living conditions, low educational attainment, high unemployment, comparatively high rates of the spread of communicable illness, lack of access to health care and poverty. Furthermore, a recent study found that people living in colonias had the highest rates of binge drinking and alcohol dependence correlated with anxiety, traumatic stress, and hopelessness.

In other studies, researchers have found that “people with low socioeconomic status (SES) have dramatically higher disease risks and shorter life spans” than wealthier people. Therefore, poor people have less access to health care and more incidents of harmful lifestyles associated with drinking, smoking, and obesity.

School based Nutrition
In nutritional research, investigators assess the experiences of child food insecurity and seasonal instability within Mexican origin mother-child dyads living US-Mexico border colonias. By focusing on food insecurity, which is known for causing health effects across a lifespan, investigators seek to comprehend the effects of school-based and summertime nutrition programs amongst women and their children, specifically within Texas border colonias. An important attribute of this research was that the study depended on a multi-level analysis, which relied on repeated measurements. It also took into account the perceptions and experiences of children within the research.

According to research, food insecurity among Hispanic and Mexican-origin U.S. households exceeds national estimates (Nalty). Furthermore, research shows that in 2011, 26.2% of Hispanic families in the United States were food insecure, and households with child-food insecurity 17.4% were Hispanic.

Today environmental justice and food justice focus “beyond traditional notions of environmental or food issues to address issues of health, workers rights and working conditions, disparities regarding access to environmental and food goods, land use and respect for the land".

Research, Decision-Making, & Childhood Obesity
This subsection addresses childhood obesity in Mexican-American low-income communities through a qualitative research study that involved local decision makers in proposing policy recommendations addressing the issues of childhood obesity within communities like colonias. As a result, four policy ideas came about: 1) establishing sustainable community- based health programs; 2) improving neighborhood infrastructure and safety; 3) increasing access to parks; and 4) supporting community organizations to disseminate health education to parents and children. Overall, the purpose of bridging research with policy is to provide a knowledge transfer process that directs data to policy makers in order to address obesity and physical activity among low-income, Mexican children as well as analyze environmental policy recommendations.

According to Gottlieb, food issues “are particularly pronounced in low-income communities where lack of access to fresh, affordable healthy food has direct health and nutritional consequences” (Gottlieb). He elaborates by saying, “Where we live—the environments around us—include such core factors as land use, transportation, housing, parking, and retail store locations. These are preeminently issues of the built environment, which are powerful food justice and environmental justice issues”. By adequately approaching these food justice and environmental justice issues, there is a greater chance of reducing health disparities among U.S.-Mexico border residents.

Related Sources
1. Blume, Arthur W., Michelle R. Resor, Michael R. Villanueva, and Leslie D. Braddy. "Alcohol use and comorbid anxiety, traumatic stress, and hopelessness among Hispanics." Addictive Behaviors 34, no. 9 (September 2009): 709-13.

2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC Health Disparities and Inequalities Report — United States, 2011. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report ed. Vol. 60. Atlanta, GA: Epidemiology and Analysis Program Office; Surveillance, Epidemiology, and Laboratory Services; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2011. 21-27. Print.

3. Dabir, Surabhi. "HARDSHIP AND HOPE IN THE BORDER COLONIAS." Journal Of Housing & Community Development 58, no. 5 (September 2001): 31. Academic Search Complete, EBSCOhost

4. Gottlieb, Robert. Where We Live, Work, Play. . . and Eat: Expanding the Environmental Justice Agenda. Environmental Justice ed. Vol. 2: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2009. 7-8.1 vols. Print.

5. Larson, Jane E. Informality, Illegality, and Inequality. Vol. 20: Yale Law & Policy Review, Inc., 2002. 137-82. 1 vols. Print.

6. Mier, Nelda, Lee Smith, David Irizarry, Genny Carrillo-Zuniga, and Chanam Lee. "Bridging Research and Policy to Address Childhood Obesity Among Border Hispanics." American Journal of Preventive Medicine 44, no. 3 (March 2013): S208-14.

7. Mier, Nelda, Marcia G. Ory, Dongling Zhan, Martha Conkling, and Joseph R. Sharkey. "Health-related quality of life among Mexican Americans living in colonias at the Texas-Mexico border." Social Science and Medicine 66 (2008): 1760-71.

8. Mohai, Paul, David Pellow, and J. Timmons Roberts. Environmental Justice: The Annual Review of Environmental Resources, 2009. 406-16. Web. 4 Apr. 2014.

9. Nalty, Courtney C., Joseph R. Sharkey, and Wesley R. Dean. "School-Based Nutrition Programs Are Associated with Reduced Child Food Insecurity over Time among Mexican-Origin Mother-Child Dyads In Texas Border Colonias." The Journal of Nutrition 143, no. 5 (May 2013): 708-13.

10. Neal, Daria E., Veronica E. Famira, and Vernice Miller-Travis. Now is the Time: Environmental Injustice in the U.S. and Recommendations for Eliminating Disparities. Washington DC: Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, 2010. 48-81. Print.

11. Sapolsky, Robert. “Sick of Poverty”: Scientific American, Inc., 2005. 92-99. Print.

12. VanDerslice, James. "Drinking Water Infrastructure and Environmental Disparities: Evidence and Methodological Considerations." American Journal of Public Health 101, no. 1 (2011): S109-14.

13. US Inst. Med. 1999: Toward Environmental Justice: Research, Education, and Health Policy Needs. Washington, DC: Natl. Acad.