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The Role of Emergent Shared Identity in Psychosocial Support among Refugees of Conflict in Developing Countries

Alfadhlil, Khalifah; Güler, Meltem; Cakal, Huseyin; Drury, John

The Role of Emergent Shared Identity in Psychosocial Support among Refugees of Conflict in Developing Countries Thumbnail


Authors

Khalifah Alfadhlil

Meltem Güler

John Drury



Abstract

In spite of the harsh conditions that refugees of conflicts experience for many years in exile in developing countries, there is evidence showing that refugees of conflict help each other. This study aimed to explore one possible mechanism underlying such support and sought to answer three main research questions: Do refugees share an emergent identity that facilitates support among them (similar to people affected by disasters)? Does this identity-based support have an impact on their health? If so, does this positive impact help to mitigate the negative effect of exile stressors on refugees’ health? We carried out two questionnaire surveys among Syrian refugees, first in Turkey (n = 234) and then in Jordan (n = 156). The data were analysed using path analysis to test hypotheses and build a theoretical model. We found evidence suggesting a process of shared social identity-based support among the refugees. We found that the general health of refugees to be predicted mainly by stress, but we also found that collective efficacy has a positive association with health, which suggests a buffering effect. These results shed light on the process of social support among refugees of war and suggest the role of shared identity, which can have a limited buffering effect on the health of the refugees, though not enough to fully mitigate the negative effect of secondary stressors. However, we suggest that such a process can be utilised as base for interventions that approach refugees of war as a group (i.e. at community rather than individual level).

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 10, 2019
Publication Date Jan 10, 2019
Publicly Available Date Mar 28, 2024
Journal International Review of Social Psychology
Publisher Ubiquity Press
Pages 2
DOI https://doi.org/10.5334/irsp.176
Keywords Syrian refugees, conflicts, social identity, psychosocial support, secondary stressors
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.5334%2Firsp.176

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