Migration process experience and its impact on well-being among women immigrants in Indonesia (original) (raw)
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PSYCHOSOCIAL STORIES OF WOMEN MIGRATED FROM SYRIA TO TURKEY: A QUALITATIVE STUDY
Uluslararası Sosyal Araştırmalar Dergisi, 2019
Migration has become among the most emerging topic as escalating local conflicts and poverty in the World. In this study, specifically, it is aimed at understanding and revealing Syrian women's psychosocial states and their effects, living in Turkey which hosts the most refugee and asylum seekers in the Word because of conflicts and war in the neughboring Middle East. 13 Syrian women have been interviewed in order to gather information and insight on these women's experiences and lives of premigration, during migration and after migration. Syrian women have experienced problems of adaptation, language, finding someone to look after their children, being a foreigner, social and psychological stress. Also they have had deep sorrow about leaving their country, families, relatives and children. In Turkey they've faced problems with shelter, education, food and employment, and safety needs have been the most urgent one. It's also founded out that the Syrian women have developed their own managing strategies and maintained gender based roles.
Refugee women’s experience of the resettlement process: a qualitative study
BMC Women's Health, 2019
Background Resettlement can be particularly challenging for women as having a lower socioeconomic status and language barriers, may impede women’s access to education, employment opportunities, health-care services, as well as the cultural, social, material and resilience factors that facilitate adjustment and adaption. Thus, the aim of this study is to further explore the perception of refugee women in Sweden concerning their situation during active participation in the resettlement process in the country. Methods Qualitative interview study with 11 recently arrived refugee women who had received their residence permits and were enrolled in the resettlement process. The interviews were conducted in Swedish with the support of an authorized Arabic translator present by telephone. Results Refugee women suffered from being separated from their loved ones and felt compelled to achieve something of value in the host country. All experienced both physical and mental anguish. Conclusions ...
Immigrant and refugee families: global perspectives on displacement and resettlement experiences
2016
The following are reviews for Immigrant and Refugee Families: Global Perspectives on Displacement and Resettlement Experiences: This is a powerful, positive, and very well conceptualized and written book. It includes a plethora of theory, research and practice-related information. The book's systemic framework is unique in that it allows us to understand these issues within the context of relationships. I want to congratulate the editors and authors for creating such strongly affirming content dedicated to the well-being of refugees and immigrants. It is especially refreshing and timely to see this book address the above from the perspective of social justice. The format of the book is ideal for the goals of the editors, and for the communities that they wish to reach. I have no doubt that the book will enjoy a wide range of readership.
An Exploration of the Experiences of Migrant Women
International Journal of User-Driven Healthcare, 2012
Women across the world migrate for a wide range of reasons. Some gravitate to urban centres in their own countries seeking safety, education, health care, and employment opportunities. Others travel across national boundaries seeking reprieve from the atrocities of war and extreme poverty. Migration within countries is on the rise, as people move in response to adverse conditions such as lack of resources, services and education, and employment opportunities. In addition they may want to escape from violence or natural disasters. This movement of people from rural to urban areas has resulted in an explosive growth of cities around the globe. This paper draws on a research case study undertaken with the Kewapi language group in Port Moresby and the Batri Villages of the Southern Highlands in Papua New Guinea. It seeks to highlight the perspectives of women traveling vast distances from their home communities in order to seek education and health care. It explores the implications for...
Migration is the phenomenon of people’s leaving their areas of residence definitely or temporarily due to a number of reasons (IOM, 2009). Even though the term migration primarily connotes the movement of a particular population from one location to another, migration has a structure that is much more extensive and deep-rooted than mere geographic replacement (Aksu & Sevil, 2010). Today, rapidly changing environmental, economic, political, and social structures lead individuals and groups to migrating to settle in different regions. Based on classifications using different criteria, we may talk of types such as voluntary migration, forced migration, permanent or temporary migration, transit migration, illegal migration, and chain migration (Mutluer, 2003; Gündüz 1996 cited in Ilgaz & Tuzcu 2005). In the literature, internal migration is identified as the population movement between areas within the borders of the country and external migration is identified as movements of geographic replacement occurring towards neighbouring countries or even beyond (Şahin, 2001).
Selçuk Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Dergisi, 2023
At the intersection of structural factors such as patriarchy, globalization, racism, and categories like age, ethnicity, language, religion, social capital, and immigration status, women experience various phenomena of discrimination and inequality. Although the effects of violence against women have universal characteristics, social categories such as education, marital status, ethnicity, and social capital differentiate women’s experiences. This study aims to analyze the migration, violence, and homelessness experiences of women staying in a shelter as conditional refugees in Istanbul. Shelters are places where women who are exposed to violence and deprived of social support stay. Indepth interviews were conducted with 12 women staying in this shelter and 4 themes were discovered: “women’s experiences of violence”, “divorce processes and social violence”, “the process of coming to the association, identity and employment problems in the struggle to set up a new life”, and “future expectations”. It was found that women experience all sorts of partner violence as well as violence of immigration, their families apply social violence during divorce periods, shelters which provide rights-based social services help women in post-divorce processes, and women’s experiences differ at the intersection of their future expectations and social categories such as health, age, education, occupation, and immigration status. The main suggestions of this study include increasing rights-based social services for women, and gender, ethnicity, and culture-sensitive practices.
Gendered aspects of distress migration
DiGeSt - Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies
A qualitative study conducted among Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh provides empirical confirmation of two types of adverse consequence that frequently occur following distress migration: harsh and exclusionary host state policies, and exacerbation of power inequities (and related abuse) within the refugee community. This article describes research that explored the circumstances of female Rohingya refugees living in the Cox’s Bazar refugee camps in Bangladesh after fleeing genocidal violence in Myanmar. The refugees describe harsh gendered aspects of their forced displacement, including limited access to needed protection and services as well as intra-community hardships exacerbated by the impact of displacement and segregation. Both sets of outcomes constitute preventable human rights violations that require redress.
The Phenomena Of Acculturation In First-Generation Somali Refugee Women
2021
The decision to relocate and seek refuge from one country to another country is a decision that typically requires careful consideration (Hucklesby & Travis, 2002). The most common reasons refugees decide to flee their country are religious, national, social, racial, or political persecution (Rueckert, 2017). The purpose of this qualitative, narrative study was to give a voice to three first-generation adult Somali refugee women who have shared their acculturation and adaptation experiences upon arriving in the United States. The research question this study answered was how do first-generation Somali women describe their individual experiences in acculturating within the United States, specifically, the State of Maine? The analysis yielded five themes from the participants’ restoried narratives as it relates to their acculturation experiences. These themes included (1) cultural differences, (2) mental health, (3) trauma, (4) children and their well-being, and (5) social service pro...