Clark Nancy, Yurdakul Gökce, Hilario Carla, Elgharbawy Heba, Izzden Nedal, Moses Elias, Zaidalkilani Muna
School of Nursing, Faculty of Human and Social Development, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2, Canada.
Department of Diversity and Social Conflict, Institute of Social Sciences, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 10117 Berlin, Germany.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2024 Nov 30;21(12):1600. doi: 10.3390/ijerph21121600.
The impact of forced migration on the mental health of refugee men is far-reaching and compounded by gendered masculinity, which shapes men's access to employment and other resources. A gap in knowledge exists on the broader determinants of refugee men's mental health.
Using community-based participatory action research and the arts-based method of photovoice, this study advances knowledge about the gendered impacts of forced migration from the perspective of ( = 11) Syrian refugee men in the Canadian context. Theoretical approaches of intersectionality and masculinity were applied to understand how power relations shape Syrian men's identities, their access to employment, and impacts on their mental health.
Syrian men's identities were marginalized by working in low-wage jobs because of inequitable policies that favored Canadian experience and credentialing assessment processes that devalued their knowledge. Multiple and overlapping factors shaped Syrian men's mental health including language and literacy barriers, time and stage of life, isolation and loneliness, belonging and identity, and gender-based stress. Caring masculinities performed through fathering, cultural connection, and service-based work promoted agency, hope, and resilience.
Public health and community-based pathways must adopt gender-responsive and intersectional approaches to policy and practice. Peer-based programs may mitigate harmful forms of masculinity and promote transformative change to support refugee men's mental health.
被迫迁移对难民男性心理健康的影响深远,且因男性特质而加剧,这种特质影响着男性获得就业及其他资源的机会。在难民男性心理健康的更广泛决定因素方面,存在知识空白。
本研究采用基于社区的参与式行动研究以及基于艺术的摄影声音方法,从加拿大背景下的11名叙利亚难民男性的角度,增进对被迫迁移的性别影响的认识。运用交叉性和男性特质的理论方法,以理解权力关系如何塑造叙利亚男性的身份、他们获得就业的机会及其对心理健康的影响。
由于偏向加拿大经验的不公平政策以及贬低他们知识的资格评估程序,叙利亚男性从事低薪工作,其身份被边缘化。多种相互重叠的因素影响着叙利亚男性的心理健康,包括语言和读写障碍、人生阶段和时间、孤立与孤独、归属感与身份认同以及基于性别的压力。通过为人父、文化联系和基于服务的工作所展现的关怀型男性特质,促进了能动性、希望和复原力。
公共卫生和基于社区的途径必须在政策和实践中采用性别敏感和交叉性方法。基于同伴的项目可能减轻有害的男性特质形式,并促进变革性改变,以支持难民男性的心理健康。