Journal Article10.3389/fsoc.2024.1251871
Sociocultural predictors of immigrant adjustment and well-being
2
TL;DR: Sociocultural predictors of immigrant adjustment and well-being examined in adult Georgians residing in Greece, Italy, and Germany. Findings suggest that sociocultural adjustment and the lack of perceived discrimination are key factors influencing well-being.
read more
Abstract: Introduction Research shows that culture change may pose risks to immigrant wellbeing. Our study examined adult Georgians (N = 431) residing in Greece, Italy, and Germany, and explored associations between their demographic characteristics, sociocultural adjustment, and psychological well-being outcomes. Methods Conducted via electronic self-report survey, the cross-sectional study measured participants’ levels of sociocultural adjustment, psychological adjustment, and depression along with the willingness to interact with host nationals, perceived sense of discrimination, history of being undocumented, age and length of relocation, and fluency in host language. The study also examined differences in three subsamples from the standpoint of intercultural distance. Sociocultural Adjustment Scale, Brief Psychological Adaptation Scale, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale and Host Interaction Scale were used to measure the corresponding variables. Perceived history of discrimination was measured by a Likert-scale question about discrimination in a host country. Intercultural distance was established by Hofstede cultural compass and was estimated to be the smallest with Greece and the largest with Germany. Results Depression was positively predicted by histories of discrimination and illegal immigration, host language fluency upon relocation, and was negatively predicted by sociocultural adjustment. Psychological adjustment was positively predicted by sociocultural adjustment, willingness to interact with host nationals, and ongoing language fluency, while perceived sense of discrimination, age, and poor financial state acted as negative predictors. Finally, sociocultural adjustment acted as the strongest determinant of wellbeing predicting both lower depression and higher psychological adjustment. Discussion Our findings suggested that adjustment in diverse sociocultural domains was the most critical for the immigrants’ psychological well-being along with the lack of perceived discrimination. Additional factors associated with the better adaptation outcomes included younger age, willingness to interact with host nationals, language fluency, better financial standing and no history of being undocumented. The results also indicated that host language proficiency upon relocation may contribute to migrant susceptibility, whereas intercultural distance may be overshadowed in importance by acculturation conditions. The findings illustrate the complexity of migration and culture change and point to the superiority of wholistic policies and practices in promoting smooth transition of immigrant populations.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Türki̇ye’de göçmen poli̇ti̇kalari özeli̇nde göçmen gi̇ri̇şi̇mci̇li̇ği̇ni̇n değerlendi̇ri̇lmesi̇: ni̇tel bi̇r çalişma
Osman AKARSU>,Mehmet Değirmenci +1 more
Abstract: Bu araştırmanın temel amacı, Türkiye’de uygulanan göçmen politikaları ve göçmen girişimciliği olgusunu bu girişimcilerin bakış açısından değerlendirmektir. Girişimcilikle ilgili literatür göçmen girişimciliği olgusunu çoğunlukla “kanun önemsiz şeylerle ilgilenmez” anlayışıyla, “de minimis non curat lex” yaklaşımıyla ele almakta, göçmenlerin yerleştikleri ülkelerdeki mevcut politikalar ve azınlıkların girişimciliğine dair yasal düzenlemeler çoğu zaman göz ardı edilmektedir. Bu çalışmada Suriyeli göçünün yoğun etkilerinin görüldüğü Güneydoğu Anadolu bölgesinde faaliyetlerini devam ettiren 20 göçmen girişimci ile yarı yapılandırılmış derinlemesine görüşmeler gerçekleştirilmiştir. İçerik analizi yöntemiyle yapılan analizlerde, katılımcıların, göçmen girişimciliği olgusunu aile geçimi, güvenlik, fırsat ve bağımsızlık ekseninde tanımladıkları ve politika yapıcılara girişimcilik süreçlerine dair göçmen girişimcilere uygulanan seyahat engelinin kaldırılması, çalışma izni ve ruhsat gibi bürokratik zorlukların kolaylaştırılmasına yönelik öneriler verdiklerini açığa çıkarmaktadır. Bu çalışmanın göçmen girişimciliği kavramının tanımlanması, politikalar özelinde karşılaşılan zorluklar ve potansiyel çözüm yollarına dair literatüre katkı sunacağı düşünülmektedir.
Rethinking Acculturation: Placing Social Interaction at the Center of Cultural Adaptation
Pin‐Hao A. Chen,Feng-Chun B. Chou +1 more
Abstract: ABSTRACT Acculturation is a complex and ongoing process that involves psychological, social, and cultural adaptation as individuals navigate new environments. To better capture its dynamic nature, we propose a shift from viewing acculturation as solely an individual‐level adjustment to understanding it as a socially embedded and interaction‐driven phenomenon. Building on recent insights from interacting minds, cognitive neuroscience, social psychology, and cultural psychology, we examine how shared cultural meanings are formed and reshaped through everyday interactions between immigrants and non‐immigrant residents. We also emphasize the importance of methodological innovation, including naturalistic paradigms, social network analysis, and computational simulations in disentangling the complicated mechanisms underlying acculturation. In addition, by extending the scope of inquiry to less frequently studied migratory flows across regions beyond the classical East‐West framework, future work should call for more globally attuned and multidimensional models of cultural adaptation. Together, these perspectives offer a path toward a deeper and more comprehensive understanding of acculturation processes.
References
Acculturation When Individuals and Groups of Different Cultural Backgrounds Meet
David L. Sam,John W. Berry +1 more
TL;DR: Often those who integrate are better adapted than those who acculturate by orienting themselves to one or the other culture or to neither culture (marginalization), and Implications of these findings for policy and program development and for future research are presented.
•Book
English with an Accent: Language, Ideology and Discrimination in the United States
Rosina Lippi-Green
- 23 May 1997
TL;DR: The Shadow of Language Glossary as mentioned in this paper is a collection of glossaries about the history of racism in the United States and its relationship to the use of language in the educational system.
1.9K
Is acculturation unidimensional or bidimensional? A head-to-head comparison in the prediction of personality, self-identity, and adjustment.
TL;DR: Although the unidimensional measure showed a coherent pattern of external correlates, the bidimensional measure revealed independent dimensions corresponding to heritage and mainstream culture identification, which displayed patterns of noninverse correlations with personality, self-identity, and psychosocial adjustment.
1.5K
The prediction of psychological and sociocultural adjustment during cross-cultural transitions☆
Wendy Searle,Colleen Ward +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors tried empirically to distinguish psychological and sociocultural forms of adjustment during the process of cross-cultural transitions by using multiple regression analysis to construct predictive models of psychological adjustment.
1.5K
English with an accent: language, ideology, and discrimination in the United States
TL;DR: The second edition of Lippi-Green's book, English with an accent: Language, ideology, and discrimination in the United States, continues the conversation from her 1997 first edition regardin...
1.2K