Tuesday, 25 April 2023

Resilience and Vulnerabilities of Syrian Refugee Families in Jordan | Chapter 12 | Research Highlights in Language, Literature and Education Vol. 4

 One of disaster refugee crises of our era is thought expected the one involving Syrian aliens. Jordan has taken in 1.3 million Syrian emigrants since 2011, that is the third-highest number of Syrian foreigners handled by a single country with its own government [1]. The study's main goal search out pinpoint the elements that obviated Syrian refugee parents and their juveniles from integrating into the host country with its own government. Structured interviews were carried out with 120 Syrian evacuee families in Amman, Jordan, in 2016. The families involved a father, a mother, and a infant aged 6 to 12. The findings told that illiteracy exists in a assortment of areas of Syrian exiles' lives. Literature illiteracy, health ignorance, and economic illiteracy were found to be a variety of illiteracy, which was a average barrier to integration for the displaced persons in the study. The implications of the verdicts highlight the significance of conceiving crucial connections betwixt researchers, non-political organization practitioners, and policymakers to address the heap of illiteracy, in order to advance displaced displaced persons' integration and contribution to host nations. The connections will make it smooth to create programs and procedures that are more suited to the needs and assets of Syria's 13.5 heap internally displaced society. Providing more accurate news on what a resettlement or host country commit and could not offer to refugees would help ruling class develop sensible expectations, making the adjusting process more profitable.

Author(s) Details:

Kee Jeong Kim,
Department of Human Development and Family Science, Virginia Tech, USA.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RHLLE-V4/article/view/10261

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