Ambiguous loss of home: Syrian refugees and the process of losing and remaking home

[1]  R. Rosner,et al.  Prolonged grief in refugees living in Germany confronted with ambiguous or confirmed loss , 2021, Anxiety, stress, and coping.

[2]  N. Morina,et al.  Global burden of post-traumatic stress disorder and major depression in countries affected by war between 1989 and 2019: a systematic review and meta-analysis , 2021, BMJ Global Health.

[3]  Cecilia Ayón,et al.  Y el luto sigue (and the grief continues): Latinx Immigrant's Experiences of Ambiguous Loss in the Age of Restrictive Immigration Policy , 2021, Family Relations.

[4]  R. Bryant,et al.  A prevalence assessment of prolonged grief disorder in Syrian refugees , 2021, World psychiatry : official journal of the World Psychiatric Association.

[5]  Yafa Shanneik Displacement, humanitarian interventions and gender rights in the Middle East: Syrian refugees in Jordan as a case study , 2021, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.

[6]  James Worrall,et al.  Methods in the madness? Exploring the logics of torture in Syrian counterinsurgency practices , 2021, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies.

[7]  D. Padgett,et al.  Home Is Where Your Root Is: Place Making, Belonging, and Community Building among Somalis in Chicago. , 2021, Social work.

[8]  A. Kersting,et al.  Traumatized Syrian Refugees with Ambiguous Loss: Predictors of Mental Distress , 2021, International journal of environmental research and public health.

[9]  C. Herrera-Espiñeira,et al.  The Grief of Relatives of Missing Migrants and Supportive Interventions: A Narrative Review , 2021, Clinical nursing research.

[10]  An Van Raemdonck A desire for normality: (early) marriage among Syrian refugees in Jordan between waiting and home‐making , 2021 .

[11]  L. Mkandawire-Valhmu,et al.  Promoting the health of refugee women: a scoping literature review incorporating the social ecological model , 2021, International Journal for Equity in Health.

[12]  A. Maercker,et al.  Prolonged grief disorder in refugees from Syria: qualitative analysis of culturally relevant symptoms and implications for ICD-11 , 2021 .

[13]  A. W. Kim,et al.  “Thinking Too Much”: A Systematic Review of the Idiom of Distress in Sub-Saharan Africa , 2021, Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry.

[14]  U. Schnyder,et al.  A network analysis of postmigration living difficulties in refugees and asylum seekers , 2021, European journal of psychotraumatology.

[15]  Hanaa A. M. Shuwiekh,et al.  The Mental and Physical Health Effects of Torture: The Role of Identity Salience as a Pathway to Posttraumatic Growth and Healing: The Case of Syrian Refugees and IDPs , 2021, Psychology.

[16]  P. Özdemir,et al.  Investigation of the Associations between Posttraumatic Growth, Sleep Quality and Depression Symptoms in Syrian Refugees , 2021 .

[17]  J. Rehm,et al.  Prevalence and predictors of psychopathology in the war-afflicted Syrian population , 2020, Transcultural psychiatry.

[18]  S. Poulsen,et al.  Comparing Western symptoms of depression with Arabic idioms of distress: A qualitative study , 2020, Current Psychology.

[19]  P. Boelen,et al.  Post-Migration Stressors and Their Association With Symptom Reduction and Non-Completion During Treatment for Traumatic Grief in Refugees , 2020, Frontiers in Psychiatry.

[20]  J. Cénat,et al.  Correlates of grief-related disorders and mental health outcomes among adult refugees exposed to trauma and bereavement: A systematic review and future research directions. , 2020, Journal of affective disorders.

[21]  W. Tol,et al.  What works in psychosocial programming in humanitarian contexts in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review of the evidence , 2020, Intervention.

[22]  K. Felmingham,et al.  A population study of prolonged grief in refugees , 2019, Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences.

[23]  Wai Kai Hou,et al.  Everyday life experiences and mental health among conflict-affected forced migrants: A meta-analysis. , 2019, Journal of affective disorders.

[24]  Nancy J. Murakami,et al.  A Group Treatment for Displaced Survivors of Persecution: A Reflective Account Through a Psychosocial Lens , 2019 .

[25]  L. Kirmayer,et al.  Mental health of resettled Syrian refugees: a practical cross-cultural guide for practitioners , 2019, The Journal of Mental Health Training, Education and Practice.

[26]  T. Betancourt,et al.  Stronger together: Community resilience and Somali Bantu refugees. , 2019, Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology.

[27]  Z. Steel,et al.  An ecological model of adaptation to displacement: individual, cultural and community factors affecting psychosocial adjustment among Syrian refugees in Jordan , 2018, Global Mental Health.

[28]  F. Gardner,et al.  Modeling the effects of war exposure and daily stressors on maternal mental health, parenting, and child psychosocial adjustment: a cross-sectional study with Syrian refugees in Lebanon , 2018, Global Mental Health.

[29]  A. Maercker,et al.  The Assessment of Grief in Refugees and Post-conflict Survivors: A Narrative Review of Etic and Emic Research , 2018, Front. Psychol..

[30]  J. Drury,et al.  The role of shared social identity in mutual support among refugees of conflict: An ethnographic study of Syrian refugees in Jordan , 2018 .

[31]  Boshra Al Ibraheem,et al.  Appraisals and emotion regulation mediate the effects of identity salience and cumulative stressors and traumas, on PTG and mental health: The case of Syrian’s IDPs and refugees , 2018 .

[32]  V. Gormez,et al.  Psychopathology and Associated Risk Factors Among Forcibly Displaced Syrian Children and Adolescents , 2018, Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health.

[33]  A. Joscelyne,et al.  Predictors of treatment response for cognitive behaviour therapy for prolonged grief disorder , 2017, European journal of psychotraumatology.

[34]  E. Montgomery,et al.  A systematic review of risk and protective factors associated with family related violence in refugee families. , 2017, Child abuse & neglect.

[35]  M. Verkuyten,et al.  Social identity continuity and mental health among Syrian refugees in Turkey , 2017, Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology.

[36]  Boshra Al Ibraheem,et al.  The Health Effect of the Syrian Conflict on IDPs and Refugees , 2017 .

[37]  Erin E Toolis Theorizing Critical Placemaking as a Tool for Reclaiming Public Space , 2017, American journal of community psychology.

[38]  R. Schweitzer,et al.  Contributions of Loss Events to Loss Distress and Trauma Symptoms in Recently Resettled Refugee Women at Risk , 2017 .

[39]  Hawkar Ibrahim,et al.  Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms Resulting from Torture and Other Traumatic Events among Syrian Kurdish Refugees in Kurdistan Region, Iraq , 2017, Front. Psychol..

[40]  Monica M. Gerber,et al.  Nepali Bhutanese Refugees Reap Support Through Community Gardening , 2017 .

[41]  Damir S Utržan,et al.  Broken Promises and Lost Dreams: Navigating Asylum in the United States. , 2017, Journal of Marital & Family Therapy.

[42]  P. Boss The Context and Process of Theory Development: The Story of Ambiguous Loss , 2016 .

[43]  R. M. Perez Lifelong Ambiguous Loss: The Case of Cuban American Exiles , 2016 .

[44]  Catherine A. Solheim,et al.  Ambiguous Loss Experienced by Transnational Mexican Immigrant Families. , 2016, Family process.

[45]  Matthew R. Stevens The collapse of social networks among Syrian refugees in urban Jordan , 2016 .

[46]  Wendy Pearlman Narratives of Fear in Syria , 2016, Perspectives on Politics.

[47]  U. Schnyder,et al.  Attachment style and interpersonal trauma in refugees , 2016, The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry.

[48]  L. Kirmayer,et al.  Mental health and psychosocial wellbeing of Syrians affected by armed conflict , 2016, Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences.

[49]  J. de Jong,et al.  Family interventions in traumatized immigrants and refugees: A systematic review , 2015, Transcultural psychiatry.

[50]  T. Betancourt,et al.  We left one war and came to another: resource loss, acculturative stress, and caregiver-child relationships in Somali refugee families. , 2015, Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology.

[51]  K. Miller,et al.  War experiences, daily stressors and mental health five years on: elaborations and future directions , 2014 .

[52]  S. Kemp,et al.  Dwelling within political violence: Palestinian women's narratives of home, mental health, and resilience. , 2014, Health & place.

[53]  B. Liddell,et al.  Posttraumatic stress disorder and prolonged grief in refugees exposed to trauma and loss , 2014, BMC Psychiatry.

[54]  M. Fazel,et al.  School and Community-Based Interventions for Refugee and Asylum Seeking Children: A Systematic Review , 2014, PloS one.

[55]  D. Silove The ADAPT model: a conceptual framework for mental health and psychosocial programming in post conflict settings , 2013 .

[56]  A. Haque,et al.  Outlining a Psychotherapy Model for Enhancing Muslim Mental Health Within an Islamic Context , 2013 .

[57]  G. Nava That’s how Life is over there, Isn’t it? Family Life Changes among Mexican Non-Migrants who Stayed behind , 2013 .

[58]  G. Eagle,et al.  Continuous Traumatic Stress: Expanding the Lexicon of Traumatic Stress , 2013 .

[59]  Jeffrey S Ashby,et al.  Advances in Continuous Traumatic Stress Theory: Traumatogenic Dynamics and Consequences of Intergroup Conflict: The Palestinian Adolescents Case , 2013 .

[60]  A. Stein,et al.  Mental health of displaced and refugee children resettled in high-income countries: risk and protective factors , 2011, The Lancet.

[61]  M. Hynie,et al.  Immigrant and refugee social networks: determinants and consequences of social support among women newcomers to Canada. , 2011, The Canadian journal of nursing research = Revue canadienne de recherche en sciences infirmieres.

[62]  Sandra H. Dudley Feeling at home: Producing and consuming things in Karenni refugee camps on the Thai-Burma border , 2011 .

[63]  Michael Ungar,et al.  Community resilience for youth and families: Facilitative physical and social capital in contexts of adversity , 2011 .

[64]  S. Weine Developing preventive mental health interventions for refugee families in resettlement. , 2011, Family process.

[65]  Z. Steel,et al.  Association of torture and other potentially traumatic events with mental health outcomes among populations exposed to mass conflict and displacement: a systematic review and meta-analysis. , 2009, JAMA.

[66]  L. Bates,et al.  The Lost Boys of Sudan: coping with ambiguous loss and separation from parents. , 2009, The American journal of orthopsychiatry.

[67]  A. Squires Methodological challenges in cross-language qualitative research: a research review. , 2009, International journal of nursing studies.

[68]  L. Bates,et al.  The Lost Boys of Sudan: Ambiguous Loss, Search for Family, and Reestablishing Relationships With Family Members* , 2008 .

[69]  Jeremy Northcote,et al.  Isolation and Insecurity: Resettlement Issues Among Muslim Refugee Women in Perth, Western Australia , 2007 .

[70]  L. Kirmayer,et al.  Psychotherapy and the Cultural Concept of the Person , 2007, Transcultural psychiatry.

[71]  Celia J Falicov,et al.  Working with transnational immigrants: expanding meanings of family, community, and culture. , 2007, Family process.

[72]  C. Rousseau,et al.  Remaking family life: strategies for re-establishing continuity among Congolese refugees during the family reunification process. , 2004, Social science & medicine.

[73]  P. Boss Ambiguous Loss Research, Theory, and Practice: Reflections after 9-11. , 2004 .

[74]  Ivan Pavkovic,et al.  Family consequences of refugee trauma. , 2004, Family process.

[75]  K. Miller,et al.  Beyond the Frontstage: Trust, Access, and the Relational Context in Research with Refugee Communities , 2004, American journal of community psychology.

[76]  S. Mallett Understanding Home: A Critical Review of the Literature , 2004 .

[77]  J. Graham,et al.  Principles of Social Work Practice in the Muslim Arab World , 2003 .

[78]  J. Creswell,et al.  Determining Validity in Qualitative Inquiry , 2000 .

[79]  J. Graham,et al.  Culturally sensitive social work practice with Arab clients in mental health settings. , 2000, Health & social work.

[80]  D. Summerfield,et al.  A critique of seven assumptions behind psychological trauma programmes in war-affected areas. , 1999, Social science & medicine.

[81]  D. Silove,et al.  The psychosocial effects of torture, mass human rights violations, and refugee trauma: toward an integrated conceptual framework. , 1999, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[82]  M Eisenbruch,et al.  Cross-cultural aspects of bereavement. I: A conceptual framework for comparative analysis , 1984, Culture, medicine and psychiatry.