» Articles » PMID: 33869504

Feel Good? The Dialectical Integration of International Immigrants in Rural Communities: The Case of the Canadian Prairie Provinces

Overview
Journal Front Sociol
Specialty Social Sciences
Date 2021 Apr 19
PMID 33869504
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The increasing influx of international immigrants settling in rural communities, where their landing is expected to revitalize communities, has triggered concerns about international immigrants' adaptation and well-being. In this article, we specifically focus on international immigrants' economic integration as a part of their socialization in communities. This article integrates the results of two independent studies, respectively, focusing on rural employers' motivations to hire immigrants and immigrants' integration in rural communities, both taking place in the Canadian Prairie provinces. Based on a survey of 112 employers and 36 in-depth interviews with international immigrants and organizations promoting their integration, we explore the impact of mediating organizations on the well-being of international immigrants. The results highlight that mediating organizations facilitate the sharing of meanings between rural communities' stakeholders, which is key to success for both employers and employees in formalized organizations such as businesses. The results suggest that international immigrants' well-being is facilitated by mediating organizations that foster a dialectical transformation of rural communities where both hosts and immigrants understand each other.

References
1.
Starr P, Roberts A . Community structure and Vietnamese refugee adaptation: the significance of context. Int Migr Rev. 1982; 16(3):595-618. View

2.
Porter N . Training Dogs to Feel Good: Embodying Well-being in Multispecies Relations. Med Anthropol Q. 2018; 33(1):101-119. DOI: 10.1111/maq.12459. View

3.
Zhou M . Segmented assimilation: issues, controversies, and recent research on the new second generation. Int Migr Rev. 1997; 31(4):975-1,008. View

4.
Berry J, Hou F . Immigrant acculturation and wellbeing across generations and settlement contexts in Canada. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2020; 33(1-2):140-153. DOI: 10.1080/09540261.2020.1750801. View

5.
Friese C, Latimer J . Entanglements in Health and Well-being: Working with Model Organisms in Biomedicine and Bioscience. Med Anthropol Q. 2019; 33(1):120-137. PMC: 6492009. DOI: 10.1111/maq.12489. View