
Contents
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Setting the scene: migrant psychiatry Setting the scene: migrant psychiatry
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Identity formation Identity formation
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Trust vs mistrust Trust vs mistrust
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Autonomy vs shame Autonomy vs shame
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Initiative vs guilt Initiative vs guilt
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Industry vs inferiority Industry vs inferiority
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Identity vs role confusion Identity vs role confusion
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Intimacy vs isolation Intimacy vs isolation
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Generativity vs stagnation Generativity vs stagnation
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Ego integrity vs despair Ego integrity vs despair
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Identity formation Identity formation
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Multiple or micro-identities Multiple or micro-identities
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Analysing cultural and migrant identities Analysing cultural and migrant identities
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Acculturation and ethnic identity Acculturation and ethnic identity
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Socialization Socialization
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Problems in data collection Problems in data collection
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Migrant psychiatry and this volume Migrant psychiatry and this volume
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Factors affecting migration Factors affecting migration
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Pre-migration stage Pre-migration stage
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Post-migration Post-migration
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Therapeutic interventions Therapeutic interventions
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Special issues Special issues
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References References
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Cite
Abstract
Migration is a universal and an age-old phenomenon. Human beings have migrated for millennia for a multitude of complex reasons. The three stages of migration—pre-migration, migration, and post-migration—are a crude division of the actual physical process of migration and often tend to overlap and are not always clearly divisible. Furthermore, it is entirely possible that each stage can have substages and different steps. Geopolitical determinants of migration also independently determine social determinants. Identity formation as an individual and as a migrant can play a major role in post-migratory adjustment. People migrate for short or long periods, and each person has specific issues that need to be taken into account while attempting to understand their healthcare needs. In this introduction, some indications for the chapters in this volume are presented.
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