Canadian Psychology
Volume 57, Issue 4, 2016, Pages 254-264

Immigrant acculturation and wellbeing in Canada (Article) (Open Access)

Berry J.W.* , Hou F.
  • a Department of Psychology, Queen's University, Kingston, ON K7l 3N6, Canada, Department of Sociocultural Research, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russian Federation
  • b Department of Sociology, University of Victoria, Canada, Department of Sociology, University of Western Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Much international research has examined the various ways in which immigrants engage both their new society and their heritage culture, and the relationship between these ways of engagement and their wellbeing. The present study examines these ways of engagement and this relationship in a representative sample of 7,000 immigrants to Canada. Immigrants' sense of belonging to their source country and to Canada was used to assess their 2 cultural engagements; life satisfaction and self-rated mental health were used to assess their wellbeing. The study created 4 acculturation strategies from the 2 sense of belonging measures: high sense of belonging to both their source country and to Canada (integration), high for Canada and low for source country (assimilation), low for Canada and high for source country (separation), and low for both (marginalisation). We found that those using the integration and assimilation strategies had the highest scores of life satisfaction (but they did not differ from each other), while separation and marginalisation had significantly lower scores. For mental health, integration and separation had the highest scores (but did not differ from each other), while assimilation and marginalisation had significantly lower scores. We also found that the immigrant sample had significantly higher scores of life satisfaction and mental health than the nonimmigrants sample. In addition to the relationship with acculturation strategies, we examined some demographic and social predictors of life satisfaction and mental health. Some implications for settlement policy and practice and for service to immigrants are discussed. © 2016 Canadian Psychological Association.

Author Keywords

Life satisfaction Mental health discrimination wellbeing Acculturation strategies

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85006573433&doi=10.1037%2fcap0000064&partnerID=40&md5=3e799a78f32b99e4d53179196e0be230

DOI: 10.1037/cap0000064
ISSN: 07085591
Cited by: 32
Original Language: English