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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Laurie Cook Heffron; Mary Lehman Held; Melody Huslage – Journal of Social Work Education, 2024
Exclusionary immigration policies associated with family separation, detention, and deportation are linked to elevated stress and trauma. Social workers are well-positioned to address the detrimental effects of immigration enforcement--related harm. This study explores social work students' knowledge and perceptions of stressors, needs, and…
Descriptors: Immigration, Social Work, Correctional Institutions, Relocation
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Ronald B. Cox; Hua Lin; Robert E. Larzelere; Juan Bao – Prevention Science, 2024
Reports of deportation can create a state of chronic fear in children living in mixed-status immigrant families over their own or a loved one's potential deportation. One indicator of health disparities among youth is elevated rates of alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use (ATOD). Yet little is known about the effects of fear of deportation (FOD)…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Grade 7, Hispanic American Students, Early Adolescents
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Venla Hakala; Laura Mielityinen; Kirsi Peltonen; Taina Laajasalo; Noora Ellonen – Youth & Society, 2025
Armed conflicts violate young people's rights by exposing them to violence and trauma, disrupting their sense of safety. This study examines how Russia's war against Ukraine affects Ukrainian adolescents' lives. The study utilizes data from Let's Chat, a free, low-threshold support service for Ukrainian-speaking children and youths. We analyzed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, War, Trauma, Violence
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Lisa A. Lozano; Bianca T. Villalobos; Veronica Castro; Juventino Hernandez Rodriguez – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2024
The study investigated the role of relocating on the mental health, psychosocial stress, and social support of 159 first- and second-year Latinx college students. Findings revealed students who relocated for college had significantly higher self-reported sense of campus belonging, and social support compared to students who did not relocate.…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, College Students, Relocation, Place of Residence
Esther Lamidi; Osasohan Agbonlahor; Larry Gibbs; Sue P. Nash – Online Submission, 2024
Research has widely documented the high stress levels posed to college students by the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). However, the role of social support in mitigating the mental health impacts of stressors like residential instability among college students is less well-researched. Using data from a multi-campus online survey of college…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Mental Health, College Students
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Larrivee, Anne – Public Services Quarterly, 2014
This article describes the different stressors and anxieties facing new librarians. It also addresses the various ways that new librarians can cope with location, emotional, and work-related stressors. The article is broken into four different categories of stress; some stressors have been more explored than others. The research is based on an…
Descriptors: Librarians, Stress Variables, Novices, Anxiety
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Gutowski, Ellen; White, Allison E.; Liang, Belle; Diamonti, Alfred-John; Berado, Danielle – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2018
The present study explored the influence of psychological stress on the development of purpose among youth of color living in urban, low-income communities. A qualitative approach based on grounded theory was used to understand how stress-related experiences influence the development of youth purpose in participants' own words. Findings revealed…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Social Support Groups, Minority Groups, Urban Youth
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Londhe, Rucha – Early Child Development and Care, 2015
Culture serves as a guiding framework to parents while rearing their children. However, when parents immigrate from one culture to another, they have to negotiate the conflicting demands and values of the two cultures when making decisions about child rearing. The present study investigated various aspects of parenting demonstrated by…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Parent Child Relationship, Child Rearing, Immigrants
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Xi, Juan; Hwang, Sean-Shong – Social Indicators Research, 2011
The involuntary relocation of people for development purposes has become prevalent across the world in recent decades. Depression is one of the documented negative outcomes of involuntary relocation among resettlers. Viewing the affected population simply as passive victims, past studies have largely ignored the coping strategies employed by…
Descriptors: Coping, Foreign Countries, Relocation, Depression (Psychology)
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Wrench, Alison; Garrett, Robyne; King, Sharron – Journal of Youth Studies, 2013
It is widely acknowledged that social conditions are directly associated with health and well-being. Significantly little is known about the impact of changing social conditions, including the transition to higher education, on young people's health and well-being. This qualitative research investigated perceptions and factors that influence…
Descriptors: Well Being, Social Change, Health Conditions, Student Adjustment
Stroh, Linda K.; Brett, Jeanne M. – 1989
This study investigated the effect of relocation on 309 children of randomly selected employees of 10 Fortune 500 corporations. Even through U.S. corporations transfer over 400,000 households annually, there is little research on the effects of such moves on employees' children. This study tested hypotheses drawn from child development theory…
Descriptors: Children, Coping, Incidence, Parent Influence
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Pruchno, Rachel A.; Resch, Nancy L. – Gerontologist, 1988
Compared mortality rates for residents who transferred rooms within long-term care facility for reasons other than health (N=207) and for residents who did not move (N=353). Found mortality rates higher for moderately competent residents who moved than for non-movers; mortality rates for movers of high or low competence did not differ from those…
Descriptors: Competence, Institutionalized Persons, Nursing Homes, Older Adults
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Mirotznik, Jerrold; Ruskin, Asa P. – Gerontologist, 1984
Examined the impact of relocation on the health of chronic care patients (N=45). Results showed relocation had no effect on 13 of 18 health measures. Positive effects were noted among patients who were relatively young, had good morale, and were satisfied with their new surroundings. (JAC)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Health, Institutionalized Persons, Patients
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Frame, Marsha Wiggins; Shehan, Constance L. – Family Relations, 1994
Used Double ABCX model of family stress and adaptation to identify factors that are associated with successful adaptation to frequent involuntary relocation among 212 clergy families. Wives reported significantly higher stress, more negative perceptions of their most recent relocation, lower coping resources, and lower well-being that did clergy…
Descriptors: Clergy, Coping, Relocation, Spouses
Rutman, Deborah L.; Freedman, Jonathan L. – 1987
Research has examined the effects of relocation on the physical and psychological well-being of the elderly, but has usually neglected the pre-relocation or anticipatory period. A study was conducted to examine the experiences of older persons waiting to relocate to subsidized age-segregated apartments. Subjects were interviewed twice over a…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Foreign Countries, Older Adults
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