Reprint

Migration, Resilience, Vulnerability and Migrants’ Health

Edited by
October 2022
462 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5558-4 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5557-7 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Migration, Resilience, Vulnerability and Migrants’ Health that was published in

Environmental & Earth Sciences
Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

In recent times, particularly during the 21st century, there have been significant increases and changes in international migration and resettlement patterns due to factors such as people’s ability to travel, ease of communication and technology, and civil unrest and conflicts. Global populations have increased and integrated across settings, challenging the differentiation between types of migrants, such as refugees (those migrating because of factors such as civil unrest, wars, persecution, or other vulnerability) and economic migrants. This mixture of migration and resettlement patterns will continue for generations due to these diverse, multicultural, and complex communities and we will need more research to provide evidence to inform nations and global responses to any emergences. This Special Issue of the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health focused on the migration, resilience, and vulnerability and general migrants’ health accepted original research papers, case reports, reviews, and conference papers. Articles dealing with new approaches to address issues, including migration (opportunities, challenges, and vulnerability), migrants’ health, settlement, and migrant health-care service access and specific migrants’ subgroups were also accepted. Other manuscript types including methodological papers, position papers, policy briefs and reports, and commentaries were sought. We accepted manuscripts from different disciplines, including public health, social and behavioural sciences, anthropology, epidemiology, psychology, and demography. This reprint compiles 30 publications.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
population migration; search query; Baidu Index; urban agglomeration; health-seeking behavior; access to health care; emergency department; refugee; asylum seeker; non-urgent complaints; migrants; system models; expert knowledge; fuzzy-logic cognitive mapping; unaccompanied minor refugees; mental health; post-migration risk factors; migrant health; access to health; sexual and reproductive health; contraception; identity discourse; integration process; resilience; resettlement challenges; CALD; African youths; Australia; migrations; disability; superdiversity; social changes; social work; air quality; income; settlement intention; migrants; African diaspora; migration; Australia; belonging; politics of belonging; bordering; racism; 1.5 generation migrants; sexual and reproductive health; Australia; cross-cultural; religiosity; humanitarian emergencies; mental health; needs assessment; refugee health; disaster health; refugees; self-efficacy; post-migratory stressors; mental health problems; non-clinical population; refugees; asylum seekers; primary healthcare; general practice; communication; patient-centered care; patient engagement; African migrant and refugee youths; mental health; alcohol and other drugs; integration; South Australia; North Korean refugee youths (NKRYs); depression; emotional regulation strategy; expressive suppression; resilience; life satisfaction; youth; refugee; qualitative research; adaptation; refugees; mental burden; psychosocial support; mental health service; qualitative analyses; African migrants; resilience; race; Australia; psychosocial health care; refugees; female; asylum seekers; protective shelter; unaccompanied; migrant youth; mental health; mentoring; resilience; mixed methods; unaccompanied migrant young people; transition to adulthood; leaving care; child welfare; aftercare support; migration; special migrants’ populations; acculturation; emigration and immigration; health behaviors; qualitative method; Spain; young women; refugee health; vulnerability; sexual and reproductive health; public health; urban setting; forced migration; Lebanon; Syria; cross-sectional survey; refugees; urban refugees; asylum seekers; health protection; health promotion; well-being; expatriates; Westerners; northeast; Thailand; health; healthcare services; healthcare access; barriers; race; ethnicity; immigration; health risk; COVID-19; survey research; south-south migration; women; work; discrimination; Chile; family separation; time pressure; mental health; health disparities; refugees; depressive symptoms; internal migration experience; middle-aged; elderly; China; body mass index; hypertension; migrant workers; non-communicable diseases; Thailand; n/a