社会心理因素与索马里难民各种行为和态度的关系。

B. H. Ellis, Saida M Abdi, Vanja Lazarevic, Matthew T. White, A. Lincoln, Jessica Stern, J. Horgan
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引用次数: 48

摘要

难民研究既考察了复原力,也考察了不利结果,但还没有研究考察了不同结果是如何同时出现或截然不同的,以及导致这些不同结果的社会背景因素。为了弥补这一空白,本研究首先使用潜在特征分析来研究索马里难民中的犯罪、帮派参与、公民参与、政治参与和对暴力极端主义的开放性的聚类方式。然后,我们使用多元回归分析来研究逆境(如歧视、创伤和边缘化)与已识别的潜在类别之间的关联。我们收集了来自北美 4 个不同社区的 374 名索马里年轻成人难民(年龄 21.30 岁,平均年龄 2.90 岁,年龄在 18-30 岁之间,38% 为女性)的数据。参与者完成了一项结构化调查,评估他们的逆境经历、犯罪和/或暴力态度和行为(例如,对暴力极端主义的态度、参与犯罪行为、参与帮派)以及积极成果(例如,公民和政治参与)。我们的研究结果表明,参与者可分为 5 个不同的群体,而社会环境和个人因素与这些群体有着独特的关系。具体来说,强大的社会纽带似乎与积极的结果相关。这些研究结果表明,有必要进一步研究积极和消极结果,并特别关注社会背景因素。(PsycINFO数据库记录
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Relation of psychosocial factors to diverse behaviors and attitudes among Somali refugees.
Refugee studies have examined both resilience and adverse outcomes, but no research has examined how different outcomes co-occur or are distinct, and the social-contextual factors that give rise to these diverse outcomes. The current study begins to address this gap by using latent profile analysis to examine the ways in which delinquency, gang involvement, civic engagement, political engagement, and openness to violent extremism cluster among Somali refugees. We then use multivariable regression analyses to examine how adversity (e.g., discrimination, trauma, and marginalization) is associated with the identified latent classes. Data were collected from 374 Somali refugee young adults (Mage = 21.30 years, SD = 2.90, range 18-30, 38% female) from 4 different North American communities. Participants completed a structured survey assessing their experiences of adversity, delinquent and/or violent attitudes and behaviors (e.g., attitudes toward violent extremism, participation in delinquent behaviors, involvement in gangs), and positive outcomes (e.g., civic and political engagement). Our findings indicate that participants fall into 5 distinct groups, and that social-contextual and individual factors are uniquely related to those groups. Specifically, strong social bonds seem to be associated with positive outcomes. These findings point to the need to further examine both positive and negative outcomes, paying special attention to social-contextual factors. (PsycINFO Database Record
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