Trauma and survival in African humanitarian entrants to Australia
chapter
posted on 2023-05-22, 17:57authored byCopping, AN, Shakespeare- Finch, JE
Former refugees have been resettled in Australia since the 1940’s through the Humanitarian Migration Stream. This chapter highlights the impact of forced migration and the refugee experience of trauma on survival. The journey from pre-migration crises, to the process of fleeing one’s country, through to the challenges associated with resettlement, can have a significant impact on the mental health of Humanitarian Entrants to Australia. Differences in culture can have an impact on the meaning constructed from these experiences, and on help-seeking behaviour and preferred methods of intervention. To date, Western mental health services have used an understanding of trauma based on pathology and largely individualist intervention techniques. In this chapter, however, we seek to understand the experience of trauma for former refugees from a salutogenic perspective, and acknowledge community based coping methods and the strengths and resilience of former refugees. Using the construct of posttraumatic growth, adaptive factors of strength, religion, compassion, and new possibilities are identified as relevant to African Humanitarian Entrants in Australia.
History
Publication title
Mass Trauma: Impact and Recovery Issues
Editors
KM Gow and M Celenski
Pagination
331-348
ISBN
9781620815571
Department/School
School of Health Sciences
Publisher
NOVA Science Publishers
Place of publication
United States
Extent
20
Rights statement
Copyright 2013 Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Specific population health (excl. Indigenous health) not elsewhere classified