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1.
PLoS One ; 18(2): e0279762, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36795672

ABSTRACT

Concerning the so-called "refugee crisis" in 2015 and how it affected the position of young migrants in society, researchers have underscored the value of studies challenging one-sided images of migrant youth. This study examines how migrant positions are constituted, negotiated, and related to young people's well-being. The study was undertaken using an ethnographic approach combined with the theoretical concept of translocational positionality to acknowledge how positions are created through historical and political processes and, at the same time, are context-dependent over time and space and thus contain incongruities. Our findings show how the newly arrived youth used multiple ways to navigate the school's everyday life and ascribed migrant positions to achieve well-being as illustrated through the distancing, adapting, defense, and the contradictory positions. Based on our findings, we understand the negotiations that occur in forming migrant positions within the school as asymmetric. At the same time, the youths' diverse and often contradictory positionality showed in various ways the striving for increased agency and well-being.


Subject(s)
Transients and Migrants , Adolescent , Humans , Negotiating
2.
Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being ; 13(1): 1422662, 2018 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29336705

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to explore how young people in Sweden who neither work nor study perceive life experiences in relation to health and well-being. METHODS: A task-based interview technique was used and data was analysed with qualitative content analysis. Interviews were conducted with 16 participants aged 16-20 who were unemployed and not eligible for upper secondary school, or who had dropped out of school. RESULTS: Three themes emerged from the analysis illustrating how the young people perceive their life experiences in relation to health and well-being: Struggling with hardships in the absence of caring connections, Feeling good when closely connected to others, and Being forced to question what has been taken for granted. Each theme consists of 2-3 subthemes. CONCLUSION: Based on the young people's narrated experiences health can be understood as: something that is created in relation to others and in relation to the social and cultural context; as something dynamic and changeable; as the ability to adapt and respond to challenges; and finally as something existing on a collective as well as an individual level. Implications for school, social services and health promotion initiatives are discussed, with an emphasis on working with young people.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Attitude , Social Support , Stress, Psychological , Student Dropouts , Unemployment , Vulnerable Populations/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Emotions , Female , Health , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Life Change Events , Male , Qualitative Research , Quality of Life , Social Isolation , Surveys and Questionnaires , Sweden , Thinking , Young Adult
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