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The number of migrants continues to grow steadily in an increasingly globalized world, owing to a multiplicity of interrelated economic, social, and security factors. While migration can benefit migrants, their families, and both their origin and destination communities, a toxic narrative that tends to stigmatize migrants and consider them a problem rather than a resource dominates the public and political discourse on migration in several countries in Europe and beyond. Developing a better understanding of all aspects of migration can help in demystifying the negative perception of migrants and to support communities in benefiting the most from migration and to better respond to the challenges that it can pose.
In any migration experience, people need to redefine personal, interpersonal, socio-economic, and cultural aspects of their lives, which brings about changes in individual, family, group, and collective identities, roles, and value systems. These psychosocial challenges of migration can be a source of stress and are augmented when migration and displacement are occurring as a result of conflicts, human rights violations, environmental degradation, and natural catastrophes. In addition to the psychological impact these often-protracted situations can have on the affected migrants, undignified travel and transit conditions, family separation, loss of loved ones, difficult bureaucratic procedures to deal with upon arrival, and challenges in the integration process can all take a toll on the migrants’ psychological well-being. In addition, certain migratory paths, like the ones of victims of human trafficking, of children who travel unaccompanied, of those migrants who are detained for purely administrative reasons can have a profound, long-standing impact on their mental health and psychological well-being.
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