Child abuse and neglect are regarded as a public health problem in the United States and around the world. While refugee families experience extreme parenting stress as they resettle, little attention is placed upon how refugee women themselves view child abuse and neglect. The primary objective of this qualitative exploratory research project was to document, through interviews, the compelling narratives of 17 refugee women regarding child abuse and neglect. We discuss the unique struggles faced by refugee families while parenting their children as they resettle in the United States. Recommendations are provided for professionals working with children and refugee families
This article discusses the suitability of the focus group method for conducting research early in po...
Background: Refugee mothers have fled from their homeland to escape persecutions with their children...
Abstract Objective To synthesize the recent qualitative literature and identify the integrative them...
Child abuse and neglect are regarded as a public health problem in the United States and around the ...
This research examines Syrian refugee mothers' accounts of the physical and mental health of their c...
One major effect of displacement by war and subsequently living in a refugee camp is the disruption ...
The following exploratory correlational study examined the relationships among trauma severity, soci...
Background: The prevalence of mental health problems is high among refugee children. Childhood menta...
One in four children around the world live in a conflict or disaster zone and crises can last for de...
Refugees resettled in high-income countries like the United States have a unique set of challenges r...
Although women are rarely on the frontlines of battle, as in many other realms of contemporary life ...
Of the estimated 50 million international refugees and displaced persons (U.S. Committee for Refugee...
Refugees may experience financial, psychological, and familial stress during resettlement. In this p...
In this project, I explored the ways asylum-seeking mothers from Central America’s Northern Triangle...
This dissertation aimed to unravel how parenting practices take shape in the aftermath of war and re...
This article discusses the suitability of the focus group method for conducting research early in po...
Background: Refugee mothers have fled from their homeland to escape persecutions with their children...
Abstract Objective To synthesize the recent qualitative literature and identify the integrative them...
Child abuse and neglect are regarded as a public health problem in the United States and around the ...
This research examines Syrian refugee mothers' accounts of the physical and mental health of their c...
One major effect of displacement by war and subsequently living in a refugee camp is the disruption ...
The following exploratory correlational study examined the relationships among trauma severity, soci...
Background: The prevalence of mental health problems is high among refugee children. Childhood menta...
One in four children around the world live in a conflict or disaster zone and crises can last for de...
Refugees resettled in high-income countries like the United States have a unique set of challenges r...
Although women are rarely on the frontlines of battle, as in many other realms of contemporary life ...
Of the estimated 50 million international refugees and displaced persons (U.S. Committee for Refugee...
Refugees may experience financial, psychological, and familial stress during resettlement. In this p...
In this project, I explored the ways asylum-seeking mothers from Central America’s Northern Triangle...
This dissertation aimed to unravel how parenting practices take shape in the aftermath of war and re...
This article discusses the suitability of the focus group method for conducting research early in po...
Background: Refugee mothers have fled from their homeland to escape persecutions with their children...
Abstract Objective To synthesize the recent qualitative literature and identify the integrative them...