Human rights in countries of origin and the mental health of migrants to Canada

2020 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Human rights in countries of origin and the mental health of migrants to Canada​
Joly, M.-P. & Wheaton, B.​ (2020) 
SSM - Population Health11 art. 100571​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2020.100571 

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Authors
Joly, Marie-Pier; Wheaton, Blair
Abstract
This study explores the effect of human rights violations in countries of origin on migrants’ mental health, using archival data on human rights violations from 1970-2011, merged to a representative probability sample of 2412 adults living in a large Canadian metropolitan area. The context of exit is defined at the country level, as opposed to self-reported individual experiences of trauma. While most studies start from a question about direct exposure to human rights violations, they may miss the effect of the national-level social context - threat, instability, disruption of lives, and uncertainty - on mental health. Findings indicate that high levels of human rights violations in countries of origin have long-term effects on migrants’ mental health. The impact of human rights violations is substantially explained by the combined effect of stressors both before and after migration, suggesting a cumulative process of stress proliferation following this context of exit.
Issue Date
2020
Journal
SSM - Population Health 
Organization
Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät
ISSN
2352-8273
Language
English
Sponsor
Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2020

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