1. Key characteristics of the refugee journey for Iraqi and Syrian family members who support their children or siblings with disability.
- Author
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Smith, Louisa, Chesher, Isabelle, Dew, Angela, Higgins, Maree, Lenette, Caroline, Wells, Ruth, and Boydell, Katherine
- Subjects
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FAMILIES & psychology , *SOCIAL support , *CAREGIVERS , *HUMANITARIANISM , *PSYCHOLOGY of refugees , *SOCIAL stigma , *EXPERIENCE , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *SYRIANS , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Refugees with disability and their families are increasingly resettled in Australia but remain an under-researched group. As such, this study aimed to understand experiences of disability for humanitarian migrants who support a family member with a disability. Interviews took place with 10 family members from Iraqi and Syrian refugee backgrounds living in Australia, whose children or siblings had disability. BenEzer and Zetter's conceptualisation of the refugee journey was used to analyse four themes of these families' experience: (1) Temporal Characteristics: (2) Drivers and Destinations; (3) Process/Content of the Journey; and (4) Characteristics of People. Supporting a person or persons with disability was a defining feature of the participants' journeys across all themes, with stigma and difficulties in accessing disability support being consistent throughout. The journeys were multifaceted and ongoing, particularly in response to gaps in Australian disability support, and demonstrated the agency and advocacy that families utilised to support the best lives of those they love. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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