1. Associations among resilience, hope, social support, feeling belongingness, satisfaction with life, and flourishing among Syrian minority refugees.
- Author
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Yıldırım, Murat, Aziz, Izaddin Ahmad, Vostanis, Panos, and Hassan, Mahmood N.
- Subjects
WELL-being ,RESEARCH ,MINORITIES ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,AGE distribution ,ECONOMIC status ,BEHAVIOR ,SATISFACTION ,MENTAL health ,HOPE ,SEX distribution ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,SYRIANS ,STATISTICAL correlation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
To date, research on refugee mental health has mainly focused on understanding the absence of psychopathology rather than on their well-being and associated positive aspects. The aim of this study was to examine the role of resilience, hope, belongingness, and social support in predicting satisfaction with life and flourishing among 361 minority Syrian refugees living in Iraq (age range = 18–60 years, mean = 32.57, SD = 10.05). Participants completed the Brief Resilience Scale, Adult Hope Scale, Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support Scale, General Belongingness Scale, Satisfaction With Life Scale, and Flourishing Scale. Males reported significantly higher levels of resilience, belongingness, and flourishing compared to females. Demographic variables (age, gender, and economic level), resilience, hope, belongingness, and social support were correlated with life satisfaction and flourishing scores. While controlling for sociodemographic characteristics, resilience and hope were associated with life satisfaction and flourishing scores. However, belongingness and social support were only associated with flourishing scores. The findings suggest that equipping refugees with positive psychological resources could promote increased levels of life satisfaction and flourishing and thus enhance preventive psychosocial programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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