Academic Events

The Roles of Acculturation Pressures and Migration Reasons on Subjective Well-Being for Migrants: Findings from Japan, Australia, the US, and the UK

5 Feb 2024, Convened by Migration Oxford

COMPAS Boardroom

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Overview

Time: 10:30 am - 12 pm (UK)

This event will draw upon frameworks in acculturation psychology and migration studies. It will identify critical variables influencing migrants’ subjective mental well-being, including reasons for migration and acculturation pressures within their receiving societies. Subjective well-being is operationalized regarding life satisfaction, stress, happiness, and anxiety. Adam Komisarof will detail social markers of acceptance, which are the criteria that receiving society members use in deciding whether to accept migrants as members of the local community socially. These criteria may be achievable, such as linguistic or cultural competence, or ascribed, such as having certain ancestors or being in a specific ethnic group. He will then detail findings that assess the extent to which migrants feel that they fit both achieved and ascribed social markers in Japan, Australia, and the US and examine the impact of that fit on migrant mental health. Daisy Pollenne and Carlos Vargas-Silva will describe their research about the subjective well-being of migrants in the UK. Existing evidence points to differences in migrants' living outcomes in the UK, such as lower employment rates, even after decades in the country, associated with their initial reason for migrating (i.e., employment, study, family, or asylum). However, migrants' perspectives on this relationship are missing. Thus, this work addresses differences in migrants' subjective well-being, accounting for their initial migration reason and assessing the degree of long-term convergence/divergence between subjective well-being and other living outcomes.

Speakers

  • Adam Komisarof, Professor, Keio University
  • Carlos Vargas-Silva, Professor in Migration Studies, School of Anthropology & Museum Ethnography & COMPAS
  • Daisy Pollenne, DPhil Migration Studies Student, School of Anthropology & Museum Ethnography & COMPAS

Following the welcoming from the Migration Oxford convener, invited speakers will deliver presentations on their research as described above, followed by the discussant’s remarks. The speakers and discussant will then welcome questions and comments from the audience and engage in a dialogue to further discuss the event’s main themes. Light refreshments will be served.

This event is open to students and migration researchers at all stages of their careers, including senior scholars leading participatory research projects from across the Social Sciences Division. Members of the Oxford Sanctuary Community are also warmly invited to attend.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Abril Rios Rivera at migrationoxford@compas.ox.ac.uk

Join us in person or via Zoom.

 

You might also be interested in this related event convened by Migration Oxford: Attitudes to Migration and Patterns of Discrimination: Findings from Japan, the UK, Colombia, and Peru.