This paper explores the relationship between place-making, well-being and settlement among recently arrived youth with refugee backgrounds in Melbourne, Australia. Drawing on qualitative data including photo-novellas and neighborhood drawings, we describe the ways youth negotiate connections to place in early resettlement. Within the context of broader research on health and place, we describe how recently arrived youth actively seek out places with qualities associated with restoration and recovery and through these engagements, work to create therapeutic landscapes on arrival. The findings have implications for understanding the contribution of place-making to well-being in the settlement process
This paper explores the relationship between nature contact, wellbeing and belonging in the resettle...
For young people with refugee backgrounds, establishing a sense of belonging to their family and com...
Purpose: Each year, young refugees make up seventy percent of Australia’s humanitarian intake. A gro...
This paper explores the relationship between place-making, well-being and settlement among recently ...
This report describes the key findings of a longitudinal study (2004-2008) investigating the experie...
Based on the therapeutic landscape theory, this paper examines how young Middle-Eastern refugee indi...
This report describes the key findings of a longitudinal study (2004—2008) investigating the experie...
Although ‘ refugees ’ are frequently represented in visual media, it is predominantly as the central...
Young people from refugee backgrounds face enormous challenges in the settlement process within Aust...
This paper takes a transversal approach (Guattari, 2015) to mapping aspirational change in the stori...
Refugee adolescents resettling in a new country face many challenges, and being part of a supportive...
Refugee adolescents resettling in a new country face many challenges, and being part of a supportive...
This paper explores the relationship between nature contact, wellbeing and belonging in the resettle...
As a consequence of displacement, refugees grapple with significant resettlement challenges, such as...
Co-creation with people who have experienced being refugees, particularly those with histories of va...
This paper explores the relationship between nature contact, wellbeing and belonging in the resettle...
For young people with refugee backgrounds, establishing a sense of belonging to their family and com...
Purpose: Each year, young refugees make up seventy percent of Australia’s humanitarian intake. A gro...
This paper explores the relationship between place-making, well-being and settlement among recently ...
This report describes the key findings of a longitudinal study (2004-2008) investigating the experie...
Based on the therapeutic landscape theory, this paper examines how young Middle-Eastern refugee indi...
This report describes the key findings of a longitudinal study (2004—2008) investigating the experie...
Although ‘ refugees ’ are frequently represented in visual media, it is predominantly as the central...
Young people from refugee backgrounds face enormous challenges in the settlement process within Aust...
This paper takes a transversal approach (Guattari, 2015) to mapping aspirational change in the stori...
Refugee adolescents resettling in a new country face many challenges, and being part of a supportive...
Refugee adolescents resettling in a new country face many challenges, and being part of a supportive...
This paper explores the relationship between nature contact, wellbeing and belonging in the resettle...
As a consequence of displacement, refugees grapple with significant resettlement challenges, such as...
Co-creation with people who have experienced being refugees, particularly those with histories of va...
This paper explores the relationship between nature contact, wellbeing and belonging in the resettle...
For young people with refugee backgrounds, establishing a sense of belonging to their family and com...
Purpose: Each year, young refugees make up seventy percent of Australia’s humanitarian intake. A gro...