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1

Frost, Elizabeth Leah, Christine Markham et Andrew Springer. « Refugee Health Education : Evaluating a Community-Based Approach to Empowering Refugee Women in Houston, Texas ». Advances in Social Work 18, no 3 (18 septembre 2018) : 949–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.18060/21622.

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Although resettlement agencies in the United States assist refugees by offering a variety of local social and health services, refugees are still less likely to access these services. Few studies have evaluated refugee health education interventions focusing on barriers to accessing healthcare and overcoming negative social determinants of health. This study evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, and perceived impact of a yearlong health education intervention to empower Burmese refugee women living in Houston, Texas. The intervention included workshops, community excursions, question and answer (Q&A) sessions, and home visits. The evaluation was a formative qualitative study including interviews with Burmese refugee women who participated in the intervention and local resettlement agency caseworkers. Qualitative content analysis guided the data analysis and was conducted to identify categories and emergent themes. Key findings indicated that motivation to participate in the intervention was impacted by the women’s perceived relevance of health education material to Burmese cultural values and opportunities for hands-on learning to promote self-efficacy. Recommendations for future interventions include the use of community health workers to train refugee health educators, pairing English lessons with health education material to promote development of English language skills, developing teaching materials for refugees with low literacy, establishing bottom-up support from refugee resettlement agencies, and incorporating the social work ecological model to tailor health-focused interventions to the specific needs of the refugee community.
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Groman, Aleah S., Xiaodi N. Chen et Jill E. Lavigne. « Applying the Model for Improvement to a Student-run Quality Improvement Project in a Refugee Center : A Pilot Study ». INNOVATIONS in pharmacy 11, no 1 (9 mars 2020) : 16. http://dx.doi.org/10.24926/iip.v11i1.2202.

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Due to insufficient communication strategies between healthcare providers and refugees in the United States, this quality improvement project aimed to improve disparity in refugee healthcare. We chose to focus on community pharmacist counseling sessions with refugees in the city of Rochester, New York. The two refugee populations we focused on were the Burmese and Nepali. Due to illiteracy in their native language, the refugees were not receptive to a pamphlet detailing the beneficial roles a pharmacy can have in improving their health and wellbeing. We created a pictorial survey of pharmacies near a refugee center to identify the pharmacies the refugees were utilizing in the area. Once we identified these pharmacies, we created a counseling aid booklet translating common pharmacy language/terms into English, Burmese, and Nepalese languages supported by pictorial diagrams. The counseling aid booklet was evaluated by pharmacists using a satisfaction scale. Overall, the counseling aid booklet was found to be helpful for the pharmacist’s daily interaction with refugee populations. Further plans for the counseling aid booklet include adding more pharmacy counseling terms for common disease states in refugee populations, making the book more inclusive of other languages, and implementation in more community pharmacies and other diverse healthcare settings. Article Type: Student Project
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Ehmer, Emily A., et Ammina Kothari. « Coverage of Burmese refugees in Indiana news media : An analysis of textual and visual frames ». Journalism 19, no 11 (6 octobre 2016) : 1552–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916671896.

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This study investigates how Burmese refugees were framed by Fort Wayne’s The Journal Gazette located in one of Indiana’s cities where refugee resettlement has taken place over the last two decades. We analyzed 335 stories and 286 accompanying images to identify salient textual and visual frames. Results show that the human interest and attribution of responsibility were most salient textual frames, while the visual frame of exotic was dominant. Feature stories were more likely to have a human interest frame and, if an image is included, to reflect the visual frame of Burmese as being exotic. As a global refugee crisis continues to unfold, this study presents implications for how media coverage of future refugees in the United States will evolve based on public opinion.
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Nilsson, Johanna E., et Katherine C. Jorgenson. « Refugees in Resettlement : Processes, Policies, and Mental Health in the United States ». Counseling Psychologist 49, no 2 (7 janvier 2021) : 178–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011000020966240.

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According to 2019 data, there are 26 million refugees and 3.5 million asylum seekers around the globe, representing a major humanitarian crisis. This Major Contribution provides information on the experiences of refugees resettled in the United States via the presentation of five manuscripts. In this introductory article, we address the current refugee crisis, refugee policies, and resettlement processes in the United States, as well as the American Psychological Association’s response to the crisis and the role of counseling psychology in serving refugees. Next follows three empirical articles, addressing aspects of the resettlement experiences of three groups of refugees: Somali, Burmese, and Syrian. The final article provides an overview of a culturally responsive intervention model to use when working with refugees.
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Agbényiga, DeBrenna LaFa, Salamatu Barrie, Valentina Djelaj et Stepanie J. Nawyn. « Expanding Our Community : Independent and Interdependent Factors Impacting Refugee Successful Community Resettlement ». Advances in Social Work 13, no 2 (31 mai 2012) : 306–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.18060/1956.

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Evidence suggests that despite the aid from resettlement agencies, many refugees find the resettlement process extraordinarily stressful and have reported significant negative mental and physical health outcomes. The literature on refugee resettlement often focuses on the challenges that these individuals encounter in their new environment. However, less research has focused on community barriers and lack of support issues that can prevent refugees from resettling in the U.S. Using qualitative data collected from Burmese and Burundian refugee groups, this article examines the impact of social structures on the resettlement process. Results indicate that gaps in service delivery such as employment and housing are affected by support from the resettlement agencies and the refugees’ social support network. Results of this study contribute to the knowledge based on how best to assist refugee families.
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Maung, Joanna, Johanna E. Nilsson, Sathya B. Jeevanba, Aurora Molitoris, Abdul Raziuddin et Sepideh S. Soheilian. « Burmese Refugee Women in the Midwest : Narratives of Resilience and Posttraumatic Growth ». Counseling Psychologist 49, no 2 (7 janvier 2021) : 269–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011000020971635.

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The goal of this qualitative study was to examine the strengths and posttraumatic growth experiences of a community of female refugees from Burma resettled in a Midwestern city of the United States. Based on data gathered from eleven participants, consensual qualitative research analysis yielded a thematic overview of two domains: (a) coping and resilience, and (b) experiences of posttraumatic growth. The results provided contextual evidence to the preresettlement and postresettlement stressors experienced by Burmese refugee women in resettlement. Findings also highlight the strengths, protective factors, and resources of Burmese refugee women, whose narratives of positive growth and change seem to coexist with memories and experiences of trauma, suffering, and hardship. Implications for research and clinical practice as well as future directions are discussed.
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McHenry, M. S., A. Dixit, R. Holliday, R. A. Umoren et D. LItzelman. « Health care perspectives from burmese refugees ». Annals of Global Health 81, no 1 (12 mars 2015) : 226. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aogh.2015.02.1019.

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Munyikwa, Michelle. « (De)Racializing Refugee Medicine ». Science, Technology, & ; Human Values 45, no 5 (7 février 2020) : 829–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0162243920905014.

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Based on ethnographic research within refugee-serving institutions in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (USA), this paper examines the relationship between physicians and the knowledge they produce and consume about caring for refugees from around the world. I explore the “seething presence” of race in refugee medicine, a domain of medical practice whose entanglement with racial ideology and practice has been underexamined. I consider how knowledge about refugees from different groups—whether racially laden designations like “Asian” or “African” or national markers like Congolese or Burmese—circulates in clinical spaces as health-care teams diagnose and treat refugees using standards of “evidence-based” medicine. Assessing the primary literatures that refugee health-care providers use to justify varying care plans, I argue that race, while often unmentioned, structures the practice of refugee medicine. Additionally, the implicit use of race as an analytic, not racism or economic injustice, often disguises the impact of structural racism and inequality in refugee health disparities. I end with some reflections on how we might conduct a more just practice of refugee health care—and by extension, health care more generally—by shifting our gaze from the particularities of seemingly obvious cultural difference to social structure.
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HITOMI, Yasuhiro. « Labor Market of Burmese Refugees in Japan ». Contemporary Sociological Studies 21 (2008) : 19–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.7129/hokkaidoshakai.21.19.

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Ornelas, India J., Khanh Ho, J. Carey Jackson, Jaime Moo-Young, Anh Le, H. Hoai Do, Bouapanh Lor, Maya Magarati, Ying Zhang et Victoria M. Taylor. « Results From a Pilot Video Intervention to Increase Cervical Cancer Screening in Refugee Women ». Health Education & ; Behavior 45, no 4 (4 décembre 2017) : 559–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1090198117742153.

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Many refugee women emigrate from countries with high cervical cancer incidence rates and have low rates of cervical cancer screening both before and after resettlement. Refugee women face many barriers to cervical cancer screening, including limited knowledge of cervical cancer and screening recommendations and cultural and linguistic barriers to being screened. Our pilot study aimed to develop and evaluate educational videos to promote cervical cancer screening among Karen-Burmese and Nepali-Bhutanese refugees, two of the largest groups of refugees arriving to the United States in recent years. We developed culturally tailored narrative videos for each ethnic group. Karen-Burmese and Nepali-Bhutanese women ( N = 40) were recruited through community health educators to participate in a pre- and posttest study. We assessed changes in cervical cancer knowledge and intentions to be screened, and satisfaction with the videos. We found that women were significantly more likely to report having heard of a test for cervical cancer and indicated significantly greater intentions to be screened after watching the video. Their knowledge about cervical cancer and screening also improved significantly, and they reported high levels of acceptability with the video. Our results suggest that culturally tailored narrative educational videos were acceptable to the target audiences and may be effective in increasing cervical cancer screening among refugee women. Further research should assess how health care and social service providers could implement video-based interventions to encourage women to be screened for cervical cancer during early resettlement.
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Thomas, Meirion, et David Nott. « Treating Rohingya refugees at Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh ». Bulletin of the Royal College of Surgeons of England 100, no 2 (mars 2018) : 75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1308/rcsbull.2018.75.

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Alshadood, Maytham, Scott Butler Harpin et Jini Puma. « Burmese and Bhutanese refugee utilization of healthcare services in Colorado ». International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care 14, no 4 (10 décembre 2018) : 400–410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijmhsc-03-2018-0021.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to identify factors, within a framework for integration, associated with healthcare utilization (primary care use, dental care, and insurance coverage) for Colorado refugees, by gender. Design/methodology/approach The Refugee Integration Survey and Evaluation project was a four-year longitudinal study of refugees that resettled in Colorado beginning in 2011. Refugees from Burma and Bhutan were used in this secondary data analysis. Various integration domains were explored as predictors, across gender groups, of the healthcare utilization outcome variables (physical exam in the past 12 months, dental exam in the past 12 months, and current healthcare coverage) using bivariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses. Findings In 2015, 73.1 percent of the sample reported accessing primary health care in the past year, and only 13.2 percent used dental care services. Nearly three-quarters reported having health insurance at the time of survey. In the adjusted models, there was a strong positive association between the outcome variable “physical exam” and the predictor variables “employment and economic self-sufficiency” (OR=0.70, p<0.001), “social bonding” (OR=3.73, p<0.001), and “safety and stability” (OR=2.23, p<0.001). Additionally, education and training predicted dental visit (OR=2.06, p<0.01). None of the integration domains were statistically significant predictors of dental visits in the adjusted models. Originality/value This study offers insights about facilitators and barriers to healthcare utilization uptake after resettling in a major US city. These findings can be used by agencies and governmental organizations to best tailor healthcare services and promotion of those services for this vulnerable population.
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Brees, Inge. « Burmese Refugee Transnationalism : What is the Effect ? » Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 28, no 2 (juin 2009) : 23–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/186810340902800203.

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Burmese refugees in Thailand maintain economic, social and political links with their country of origin, but these transnational activities are influenced by the politics and level of development of the country of origin and the host country. Through transnational activities, refugees can have a positive impact on the home country by contributing to peace-building and development or they can enhance conflict, as the discussion on community engagement and political transnationalism will illustrate. Clearly, the increased capacity and networks of the Burmese diaspora have bestowed it with a large (future) potential to influence peace-building, development and conflict. Therefore, it is argued here that the various civil, political and military groups in exile should be included in the peace-building process initiated by international actors, next to stakeholders inside the country.
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Zhang, Mengxi, Ashok Gurung, Philip Anglewicz et Katherine Yun. « COVID-19 and Immigrant Essential Workers : Bhutanese and Burmese Refugees in the United States ». Public Health Reports 136, no 1 (18 novembre 2020) : 117–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0033354920971720.

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Objectives Immigrants are believed to be at high risk of infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). A leading suspected risk factor is their role in the essential workforce. We aimed to describe COVID-19–related risk factors among Bhutanese and Burmese refugees in the United States. Methods We administered an anonymous online survey in May 2020 among community leaders of Bhutanese and Burmese refugees. Using a snowball sampling strategy, we invited community leaders to complete the survey and share the link with others who met inclusion criteria (English proficient, aged ≥18, currently living in the United States). We compared respondents with and without recent COVID-19 and identified risk factors for infection. Results Of 218 refugees in 23 states who completed the survey from May 15 through June 1, 2020, fifteen (6.9%) reported infection with COVID-19. Being an essential worker during the pandemic (odds ratio [OR] = 5.25; 95% CI, 1.21-22.78), having an infected family member (OR = 26.92; 95% CI, 5.19-139.75), and being female (OR = 5.63; 95% CI, 1.14-27.82) were risk factors for infection. Among 33 infected family members, 23 (69.7%) were essential workers. Conclusion Although we had a small snowball sample, we found that working in essential industries was associated with an increased risk of COVID-19 infection among Bhutanese and Burmese refugees. We call for larger studies that include Asian immigrant subgroups, as well as immediate attention to protecting immigrant essential workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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BREES, INGE. « Refugees and transnationalism on the Thai-Burmese border ». Global Networks 10, no 2 (avril 2010) : 282–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-0374.2010.00286.x.

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Dixit, Avika, Emily M. Miner, Sarah E. Wiehe et Megan S. McHenry. « Adolescent Burmese Refugees Perspectives on Determinants of Health ». Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health 20, no 2 (20 août 2017) : 370–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10903-017-0648-7.

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Hynes, P. « Review : Fear and Sanctuary : Burmese Refugees in Thailand ». Journal of Refugee Studies 17, no 4 (1 décembre 2004) : 473–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrs/17.4.473.

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Thabchumpon, Naruemon. « Social welfare of Burmese refugees and human security ». Asian Review 25, no 1 (janvier 2012) : 73–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.58837/chula.arv.25.1.4.

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MacLaren, Duncan. « Tertiary Education for Refugees : A Case Study from the Thai-Burma Border ». Refuge : Canada's Journal on Refugees 27, no 2 (18 janvier 2012) : 103–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.34727.

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The Australian Catholic University (ACU) has, since 2003, been involved in providing tertiary education for young refugees who have fled persecution in Burma to end up in refugee camps in Thailand. This paper examines the origins of the program, the changes made as lessons are learned, and the current Diploma program which is also supported by three US universities and York University in Toronto. It also examines how past graduates have used their qualifications for the common good, a term derived from Catholic social thought which informs ACU’s specific Catholic identity as a university. The paper further looks at what challenges lie ahead within the Thai-Burmese context and how this model can be replicated in other protracted refugee situations.
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Egreteau, Renaud. « Burma in Diaspora : A Preliminary Research Note on the Politics of Burmese Diasporic Communities in Asia ». Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 31, no 2 (juin 2012) : 115–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/186810341203100205.

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This research note focuses on the far-flung Burmese overseas communities, situating them into the wider diaspora literature. Drawing on extant scholarship on refugees, migrants and exiled dissidents of Burmese origin, it presents an original cartography of Burmese diasporic groups dispersed throughout Asia. It explores their migration patterns and tentatively maps out their transnational networks. It seeks to comparatively examine the relationships these polymorphous exiled groups have developed with the homeland. Two research questions have been identified and need further exploration in the context of the post-junta opening that has been observed since 2011: First, what comprises the contribution of the Burmese diaspora to political change and homeland democratization? This has been widely debated over the years. Despite a dynamic transnational activism, there is still little evidence that overseas Burmese have influenced recent domestic political developments. Second and subsequently, how can the Burmese diaspora effectively generate social and economic change back home: by “remitting” or by “returning”? This note argues that Burmese migrant social and financial remittances might prove a more viable instrument to foster development and democratization inside Myanmar in the short term than a mere homecoming of exiles and skilled migrants. This is a preliminary analysis that hopes to encourage further research on Burmese diasporic politics and their potential leverage as “agents of change”.
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HITOMI, Yasuhiro. « Formation and Development of Political Organizations of Burmese Refugees ». Contemporary Sociological Studies 20 (2007) : 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.7129/jject.20.1.

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Swe, Yee Yee. « Mobility encounter : The narratives of Burmese refugees in Norway ». Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography 67, no 4 (septembre 2013) : 229–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00291951.2013.837501.

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Banki, Susan. « Burmese Refugees in Tokyo : Livelihoods in the Urban Environment ». Journal of Refugee Studies 19, no 3 (8 août 2006) : 328–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrs/fel015.

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Lee, Sungkyu, Sunha Choi, Laurel Proulx et Jennifer Cornwell. « Community integration of Burmese refugees in the United States. » Asian American Journal of Psychology 6, no 4 (2015) : 333–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/aap0000027.

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Seltzer, Alexandra. « Human trafficking : the case of Burmese refugees in Thailand ». International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice 37, no 4 (novembre 2013) : 279–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01924036.2013.766531.

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Lee, Yeoreum, Sehwa Lee, Mikyung Jang et Yelin Choi. « Art-based Research on Group Sandplay Therapy for Myanmar Refugee Children Staying in Malaysia ». Journal of Symbols & ; Sandplay Therapy 13, no 1 (30 juin 2022) : 215–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.12964/jsst.22005.

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This study is based on the group sandplay therapy that we provided to Burmese Chin children living in Malaysia as ethnic and religious refugees and our analysis of the themes in the children’s sandboxes using an art-based research method. All the participants were Burmese Chin refugee children aged 10 to 13 years old, attending an international refugee school in Kuala Lumpur, the capital of Malaysia. Participation was voluntary, with written consent from legal guardians. The sample chosen for the study comprised 12 children, with six males in one group and six females in the other group. Altogether, the children took part in five sandplay sessions, which lasted 120 minutes each. During these sessions, all the participants expressed individual the sandtray and then gathered to share and talk about the scenes they had made in the sand. After each session, it construed the children’s sand scenes, imaginative stories and symbolic image from an analytical psychology perspective and categorized the contents by common themes. As a result, six themes emerged: the loss of a place of life, abandoned children, bystanders, safety bases, and liberation/resettlement. Through the sandplay therapy, the refugee children could express their trauma in a safe, supportive environment. Sandplay provided these children with an opportunity to identify their trauma, independently overcome that trauma, and grow.
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Chaves, Nadia J., Katherine B. Gibney, Karin Leder, Daniel P. O’Brien, Caroline Marshall et Beverley-Ann Biggs. « Screening Practices for Infectious Diseases among Burmese Refugees in Australia ». Emerging Infectious Diseases 15, no 11 (novembre 2009) : 1769–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1511.090777.

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Stambach, Amy. « Using Burmese and other languages to teach Karenni refugees English ». Linguistics and Education 49 (février 2019) : 98–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.linged.2018.01.004.

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Cho, Violet. « Searching for home : Explorations in new media and the Burmese diaspora in New Zealand ». Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 17, no 1 (31 mai 2011) : 194–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v17i1.379.

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This study examines the place of new media in the maintance of Burmese diasporic identities. Political oppression in Burma, the experience of exile and the importance of opposition movements in the borderlands make the Burmese diaspora a unique and complex group. This study uses tapoetethakot, an indigenous Karen research methodology, to explore aspects of new media use and identity among a group of Burmese refugees in Auckland, New Zealand. Common among all participants was a twin desire to share stories of suffering and to have that pain recognised. Participants in this project try to maintain their language and cultural practices, with the intent of returning to a democratic Burma in the future. New media supports this, by providing participants with access to opposition news reports of human rights abuses and suffering; through making cultural and linguistic artifacts accessible, and through providing an easy means of communication with friends and family in Burma and the borderlands.
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Zeus, B. « Exploring Barriers to Higher Education in Protracted Refugee Situations : The Case of Burmese Refugees in Thailand ». Journal of Refugee Studies 24, no 2 (28 avril 2011) : 256–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrs/fer011.

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Gambrill, Martin. « An engineering response to the needs of Burmese refugees in Bangladesh ». Waterlines 13, no 1 (juillet 1994) : 7–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/0262-8104.1994.026.

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Lee, Sang kook. « From Political Activists to Social Entrepreneurs : Burmese Refugees in South Korea ». Journal of Refugee Studies 31, no 3 (6 mars 2018) : 371–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrs/fey011.

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Cohen, Shawn, et Ramin Asgary. « Community Coping Strategies in Response to Hardship and Human Rights Abuses Among Burmese Refugees and Migrants at the Thai-Burmese Border ». Family & ; Community Health 39, no 2 (2016) : 75–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/fch.0000000000000096.

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Daly, Nicola, et Libby Limbrick. « The Joy of Having a Book in Your Own Language : Home Language Books in a Refugee Education Centre ». Education Sciences 10, no 9 (15 septembre 2020) : 250. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/educsci10090250.

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In 2018, Aotearoa/New Zealand increased its annual refugee quota to 1000. When refugees arrive in Aotearoa/New Zealand they spend six weeks in a resettlement programme. During this time, children attend an introduction to schooling. First language (L1) literacy support for children experiencing education in a medium that is not their Home Language has been identified as essential for children’s educational success. This knowledge is reflected in Principle 4 of the International Literacy Association’s Children’s Rights to Read campaign, which states that “children have the right to read texts that mirror their experiences and languages...”. In 2018, the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY)-Yamada Foundation granted funding to IBBY in Aotearoa/New Zealand (IBBYNZ)/Storylines to supply books in the Home Languages of the refugee children in the introduction to school programme. Over 350 books were sourced in a range of languages including Farsi, Arabic, Tamil, Punjabi, Burmese, Karen, Chin, and Spanish. In this article, the sourcing of these books and their introduction to children in a refugee resettlement programme is described. Interviews with five teachers in the resettlement programme concerning the use of the books and how children and their families have been responding are reported. Future programme developments are outlined.
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Yalim, Asli Cennet, Wooksoo Kim et Isok Kim. « Challenges in health-care service use among Burmese refugees : A grounded theory approach ». Social Work in Health Care 58, no 7 (23 mai 2019) : 665–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00981389.2019.1616244.

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Kuo, Fengyi. « Community Based Life Skills Training for Adolescent Burmese Refugees Resettled in Central Indiana ». Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 100, no 10 (octobre 2019) : e54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apmr.2019.08.149.

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Mee, Kim Hyun. « ‘Life on Probation’ : Ambiguity in the Lives of Burmese Refugees in South Korea ». Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 21, no 2 (juin 2012) : 217–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/011719681202100205.

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Fike, D. Christopher, et David K. Androff. « “The Pain of Exile” : What Social Workers Need to Know about Burmese Refugees ». Social Work 61, no 2 (21 février 2016) : 127–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sw/sww005.

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Sardar, Sanjib. « THE ROHINGYA GENOCIDE AND THE CONSEQUENT INFLUX OF REFUGEES INTO BANGLADESH AND FIND WAYS TO SOLVE ITS PROBLEMS ». International Journal of Research -GRANTHAALAYAH 8, no 10 (27 octobre 2020) : 131–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.29121/granthaalayah.v8.i10.2020.1882.

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Rohingya is the name of a persecuted and oppressed nation of the world. Ethnic genocide against the Rohingya is not a new issue, the planned attack by the Burmese army on the Rohingya dates back to the 1960s. As a result of a new level of attack on August 25, 2017, about seven to eight lakh Rohingya refugees have been forced to flee in Bangladesh. Rohingyas have also been subjected to genocide, rape, torture and attacks from a section of Buddhist society in Myanmar. The main purposes of this study are to find out the causes of Rohingya genocide and the consequent influx of refugees into Bangladesh. The present study is based on intensive analysis of secondary data. The sources of secondary data are books, journals etc. It focuses on the Rohingya citizenship issue in Myanmar, its root causes, the persecution of the Rohingya and their socio-economic conditions. Reviewing all aspects of the problem, several solutions have been mentioned in the present paper.
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Hollifield, Michael, Eric C. Toolson, Sasha Verbillis-Kolp, Beth Farmer, Junko Yamazaki, Tsegaba Woldehaimanot et Annette Holland. « Distress and Resilience in Resettled Refugees of War : Implications for Screening ». International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no 3 (30 janvier 2021) : 1238. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18031238.

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There is little work published about predictors of specific trajectory types of distress in refugees of war during early resettlement in a host country. Data about distress (Refugee Health Screener—15 (RHS-15)) and possible predictors of distress were collected at the domestic medical examination (T1) within 90 days of arrival and the civil surgeon examination (T2) 11–16 months after T1 for refugee groups from three countries (COU). Descriptive, correlative, analyses of variance, and regression techniques were used to determine trajectory type and their predictors. A higher percentage (7.3%) were distressed at T2 than at T1. By group, the Bhutanese became more distressed, the Burmese became less distressed, and Iraqi’s continued to have high distress. A regression model showed gender, loss, post-migration stress, and self-efficacy to be significant predictors of trajectory type (R2 = 0.46). When the T1 RHS-15 score was added to the model, observed variance increased (R2 = 0.53) and T1 RHS score accounted for the majority of variance (r = 0.64, p < 0.001), with post-migration stress accounting for markedly less (β = 0.19, p = 0.03). Loss and self-efficacy became less significant. Loss was, however, a strong predictor of delayed and chronic distress trajectory type. These data suggest that screening for distress should occur at least twice during resettlement to detect those with initial distress and those with delayed distress. Screening should be coupled with identifying other social determinants of health and a comprehensive assessment to determine the need for intervention for secondary prevention (i.e., reducing delayed distress) and treatment (reducing chronic distress).
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Kuo, Fengyi, Nancy Goldfarb, Heidi Grove, Sarah Koning, Catherine Kennedy et Kelli Emady. « Health Status of Burmese Refugees Resettled in Central Indiana : Implications for Occupational Therapy Practice ». American Journal of Occupational Therapy 70, no 4_Supplement_1 (1 août 2016) : 7011510194p1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5014/ajot.2016.70s1-po2031.

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Bahr, Nathan C., Deborah Lee, William M. Stauffer, Michelle Durkin, Martin S. Cetron, L. Joseph Wheat et David R. Boulware. « Seroprevalence of Histoplasmosis in Somali, Burmese, and Hmong Refugees Residing in Thailand and Kenya ». Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health 20, no 2 (4 mai 2017) : 334–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10903-017-0595-3.

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Li, Jiabao. « Oscillating Border Policy : Is It a Triumph for the Government or for the Myanmar IDPs in China ? » Asian Journal of Social Science Studies 7, no 9 (20 septembre 2022) : 52. http://dx.doi.org/10.20849/ajsss.v7i9.1297.

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In recent years, several large-scale internal military conflicts in Myanmar, represented by the “8.08 Kokang Incident”, have led to an influx of Burmese into Yunnan, a border area between China and Myanmar. China’s border management has faced serious challenges, most directly reflected in a change in its border policy. China has not used enforced power to directly stop the influx of Burmese, such as building walls or barbed wire. But neither has it recognized the status of these people as refugees. China’s new border management policy is more about blurring their official status, in practice, allowing them to enter easily to the Chinese border city (Ruili) for work. But it also restricts them to the southeast coast of China in search of better income. This seemingly contradictory attitude of the Chinese government reflects the complexity of a multi-actor participation in governance in the China-Myanmar border region. Using Gramsci’s “hegemony theory” and Ho’s affinity ties theory, this paper explores how IDPs can flexibly use affinity ties networks to proactively influence the Chinese government’s new border governance policy from the bottom up by interacting with grassroots multi-actor border practices.
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Horstmann. « An American Hero : Faith-Based Emergency Health Care in Karen State, Myanmar and Beyond ». Religions 10, no 9 (26 août 2019) : 503. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel10090503.

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This article examines the vastly expanded mobility of displaced Karen villagers in the evangelical humanitarian movement, the Free Burma Rangers. This builds on ethnographic fieldwork on humanitarian cultures in the Thai-Burmese borderlands conducted since 2007 with a Thai research team and funded by Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious Diversity. While refugees are too often presented as victims, the article argues that by joining the mission, the Karen freedom fighters become ambassadors of a political ideology and evangelism. Bringing Christianity with them from their displaced homes, displaced Karen meet the evangelical humanitarian organization in the Karen hills or in the Thai refugee camps, train with them, and supply the villagers left behind with emergency health care and religious messages. Sponsored by American evangelical churches, the US military, and resettled Karen communities in the West, the freedom fighters of the Free Burma Rangers mobilize people and resources all over the globe. Recently, they have expanded their operations beyond Myanmar to places as far as Syria, Iraq and South Sudan, thus getting involved in what it presents as a global struggle between good and evil.
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Das, Dr K. C., et Adidur Rahman. « Statelessness : A Study of Chakma Refugees of Arunachal Pradesh ». Cross-Currents : An International Peer-Reviewed Journal on Humanities & ; Social Sciences 1, no 2 (25 décembre 2015) : 50–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.36344/ccijhss.2015.v01i02.005.

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The word statelessness has long been recognized as an important problem in international law. Nowhere is the problem of statelessness more acute than in South East Asia. The Sri Lankans, Tibetan, Afghani etc. in India, Burmese in Thailand and in Bangladesh, Vietnamese refugees in Cambodia and many ethnic Chinese in all parts of South East Asia are currently stateless and thus specially vulnerable the same type of human rights abuses as those suffered by the Chakmas of Arunachal Pradesh. The Chakmas are the victims of the partition of the country. They were displaced from their original homeland and migrated to Northeast India. They were rehabilitated in NEFA by the Government of India but still fighting for citizenship status. The present paper examines the statelessness of the Chakmas of North East India, especially in Arunachal Pradesh. It tries to analyze the origin of the problem of migration of the Chakmas from Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of erstwhile East Pakistan to Mizoram and Tripura and their rehabilitation in NEFA (now Arunachal Pradesh). It examines the causes of reactions from the Arunachali indigenous tribes, the All Arunachal Pradesh Students Union and from the State Government. The paper concludes with a study of the role of the Chakma organizations, the Union Government and the Supreme Court in the fight for Indian citizenship status of the Chakmas.
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Das, Dr K. C., et Adidur Rahman. « Statelessness : A Study of Chakma Refugees of Arunachal Pradesh ». Cross-Currents : An International Peer-Reviewed Journal on Humanities & ; Social Sciences 1, no 2 (25 décembre 2015) : 50–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.36344/ccijhss.2015.v01i02.005.

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The word statelessness has long been recognized as an important problem in international law. Nowhere is the problem of statelessness more acute than in South East Asia. The Sri Lankans, Tibetan, Afghani etc. in India, Burmese in Thailand and in Bangladesh, Vietnamese refugees in Cambodia and many ethnic Chinese in all parts of South East Asia are currently stateless and thus specially vulnerable the same type of human rights abuses as those suffered by the Chakmas of Arunachal Pradesh. The Chakmas are the victims of the partition of the country. They were displaced from their original homeland and migrated to Northeast India. They were rehabilitated in NEFA by the Government of India but still fighting for citizenship status. The present paper examines the statelessness of the Chakmas of North East India, especially in Arunachal Pradesh. It tries to analyze the origin of the problem of migration of the Chakmas from Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of erstwhile East Pakistan to Mizoram and Tripura and their rehabilitation in NEFA (now Arunachal Pradesh). It examines the causes of reactions from the Arunachali indigenous tribes, the All Arunachal Pradesh Students Union and from the State Government. The paper concludes with a study of the role of the Chakma organizations, the Union Government and the Supreme Court in the fight for Indian citizenship status of the Chakmas.
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Way, R. T. « FP01-3 The Plight of Migrants and Refugees : from the Perspective of a Burmese Psychiatrist ». Asian Journal of Psychiatry 4 (juillet 2011) : S29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1876-2018(11)60112-3.

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Furber, Susan, Janet Jackson, Keryn Johnson, Radmila Sukara et Lisa Franco. « A Qualitative Study on Tobacco Smoking and Betel Quid Use Among Burmese Refugees in Australia ». Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health 15, no 6 (27 juillet 2013) : 1133–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10903-013-9881-x.

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Ehmer, Emily A. « Learning to stand on their own : contradictory media representations of Burmese refugees by nonprofit organizations ». Critical Studies in Media Communication 34, no 1 (30 novembre 2016) : 29–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2016.1258716.

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Cardozo, Barbara Lopes, Leisel Talley, Ann Burton et Carol Crawford. « Karenni refugees living in Thai–Burmese border camps : traumatic experiences, mental health outcomes, and social functioning ». Social Science & ; Medicine 58, no 12 (juin 2004) : 2637–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.09.024.

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