Publication | Closed Access
Resettled Refugee Families and Their Children’s Futures: Coherence, Hope and Support
141
Citations
23
References
2009
Year
Human MigrationFamily MedicineEthnicityRefugee FamiliesRefugee HealthSocial SciencesResettled Refugee ParentsForced MigrationRefugee StatusYouth Well-beingFamily LifeRefugee StudiesFamily RelationshipsFamily DiversityFamily PolicyChild DevelopmentCultureRefugee ParentsSociologyFamily PsychologySocial PolicyMedicineRefugee MovementSocial Justice
This paper investigates the factors which influence the ability of resettled refugee parents to envisage their adolescents’ futures and support them in setting and achieving goals. It is based on the findings of a study of 10 refugee families from Africa, Asia, Europe and the Middle East, two to three years after they had arrived in Melbourne, Australia. Analysis of the findings draws on Antonovsky’s ‘sense of coherence’ framework to highlight the conditions which assist refugee parents to negotiate their social environment and develop realistic ambitions for their families’ futures. This framework is also used to point to ways in which refugee families might best be assisted by host communities to guide and support their children and thus overcome some of the potential intergenerational conflicts which can occur following resettlement.
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