Transcultural Psychiatry
Volume 46, Issue 4, 2009, Pages 539-583
Resettling Refugees and Safeguarding their Mental Health: LessonS Learned from the Canadian Refugee Resettlement Project (Article)
Beiser M.*
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a
Ryerson University, Canada
Abstract
The Ryerson University Refugee Resettlement Project (RRP), a decade-long study of 1348 Southeast Asian refugees who came to Canada between 1979 and 1981, is one of the largest, most comprehensive and longest-lived investigations of refugee resettlement ever carried out. Knowledge gleaned from the RRP about research methodology, about the resettlement experience, about the social costs of resettling refugees, about factors that promote or hinder integration, about risk and protective factors for refugee mental health, and about the refugees’ consumption of mental health and social services is summarized in the form of 18 “Lessons.” The lessons are offered in order to encourage and stimulate further research, as well to suggest policy and practice innovations that could help make resettlement easier, less costly, more effective, and more humane. © 2009, McGill University. All rights reserved.
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-73549100882&doi=10.1177%2f1363461509351373&partnerID=40&md5=c39dc928befdd922ae4a3285e906862d
DOI: 10.1177/1363461509351373
ISSN: 13634615
Cited by: 72
Original Language: English