Description

Book Synopsis
The book presents a study of – legal, illegal, and incarcerated – African immigrants in Germany. Participants responded to a selection of scales from the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI-2), the Portrait Value Questionnaire (PVQ) by Schwartz, and a measure of acculturative stress. Acculturative stress and German racism emerged as strong predictors of poor mental health, with problems becoming worse over the years of stay in Germany. Particularly among ‘economic refugees’ a precarious job situation and family fragmentation added grossly to acculturative stress. As John W. Berry, the nestor of acculturation research puts it in his epilogue: «What can only help is an increase in basic hospitality: Making African immigrants welcome in their new home is needed, not a bulwark Europe.»

Table of Contents
Contents: Legal, illegal, and incarcerated African immigrants in Germany – Mental health – Acculturative stress – Value preferences – Family fragmentation – German racism – Higher acculturative stress with increasing duration of stay in Germany – Structural equation modeling – ‘Economic refugees’ – Precarious job situation – Daily hassles.

I’m an Alien in Deutschland: A Quantitative

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    A Paperback / softback by Erhabor Idemudia, Klaus Boehnke

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 08/01/2010
      ISBN13: 9783631599754, 978-3631599754
      ISBN10: 3631599757

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The book presents a study of – legal, illegal, and incarcerated – African immigrants in Germany. Participants responded to a selection of scales from the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI-2), the Portrait Value Questionnaire (PVQ) by Schwartz, and a measure of acculturative stress. Acculturative stress and German racism emerged as strong predictors of poor mental health, with problems becoming worse over the years of stay in Germany. Particularly among ‘economic refugees’ a precarious job situation and family fragmentation added grossly to acculturative stress. As John W. Berry, the nestor of acculturation research puts it in his epilogue: «What can only help is an increase in basic hospitality: Making African immigrants welcome in their new home is needed, not a bulwark Europe.»

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Legal, illegal, and incarcerated African immigrants in Germany – Mental health – Acculturative stress – Value preferences – Family fragmentation – German racism – Higher acculturative stress with increasing duration of stay in Germany – Structural equation modeling – ‘Economic refugees’ – Precarious job situation – Daily hassles.

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