Social Behavior and Personality
Volume 46, Issue 7, 2018, Pages 1111-1122

Who am i? Migrant workers’ bicultural identity integration, social support, and social maladjustment (Article)

Kang T.*
  • a School of Psychology, Northwest Normal University, 967 Anning East Road, Lanzhou, 730070, China

Abstract

I investigated 484 migrant workers’ bicultural identity integration, social support, and social maladjustment, to shed light on the cultural conflict they experience and determine whether this differs between men and women. Results revealed that men had significantly higher levels of social support than women did, and women had significantly higher levels of social maladjustment than men did; however, there were no significant gender differences in bicultural identity integration. Furthermore, cultural conflict and social maladjustment were negatively predicted by social support, whereas cultural conflict mediated the effect of social support on social maladjustment. My findings suggest that positive social support for migrant workers could enhance their bicultural identity integration, promote more effective social adaptation, and help eliminate gender differences in social maladjustment. © 2018 Scientific Journal Publishers Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Author Keywords

Social support Gender difference Cultural conflict Social adjustment bicultural identity integration Migrant workers

Index Keywords

male sex difference female social support identity migrant worker Article social adaptation human adult maladjustment

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85061906870&doi=10.2224%2fsbp.6645&partnerID=40&md5=9fdec23fad9d0c7711e0f48770c52988

DOI: 10.2224/sbp.6645
ISSN: 03012212
Original Language: English