Adolescence
Volume 24, Issue 95, 1989, Pages 725-740

Migration and growth: separation-individuation processes in immigrant students in Israel. (Article)

Mirsky J.* , Kaushinsky F.
  • a Student Counseling Services, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
  • b Student Counseling Services, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.

Abstract

The central experiences of immigrant students in Israel are described and analyzed. It is suggested that immigration entails a process of separation from homeland as well as from internal representations of objects and of the self which are linked to homeland. This process is conceptualized in terms of Margaret Mahler's separation-individuation model. In the case of immigrant students, this process occurs concurrently and in interaction with individuation processes typical of adolescence. While motivated by adolescents' desire to avoid or delay psychological separation from their parents, immigration and absorption also revive adolescent conflicts and ambivalences. When the working through of these conflicts occurs in conjunction with the absorption process, immigration may become a growth experience that facilitates the developmental task of adolescence.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

Israel psychological aspect human comparative study Cross-Cultural Comparison Adolescent Personality Development Acculturation ego development Jew Jews individualization Individuation cultural factor Article social adaptation Social Environment migration Emigration and Immigration Social Adjustment

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0024724222&partnerID=40&md5=6578d04442cfeb57b52b25699b685604

ISSN: 00018449
Cited by: 45
Original Language: English