Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
947389 International Journal of Intercultural Relations 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The nuclear family is often the point of departure in much of the existing acculturation research on refugee youth and children of refugees. The influence of other extended family members appears to receive less attention in understanding acculturation processes and intergenerational perspectives. This qualitative study explores the influence of extended family members upon a small sample of Vietnamese refugee parents and their adolescents while they undergo acculturation through their long-term resettlement process in Norway. With repeated interviews over a time span of 3 years, we identified situations and processes in family life in which extended kin become particularly activated and influential. Vietnamese refugee families in Norway keep close contact with extended kin even in the face of geographical distance to kin remaining in Vietnam, or globally dispersed. Aunts, uncles, and cousins are experienced as significant persons in the lives of many adolescents. Additionally, birth order of parents can often influence relationship dynamics among siblings and siblings children. Extended kin surfaced as especially important and influential at critical stages and crisis situations in family life. Extended family, and in particular, parental siblings play important roles in the acculturation experience and family functioning of Vietnamese refugee families in Norway. This has important implications for the study of Vietnamese and other refugee and immigrant families in acculturation research.

► We explored the influence of extended family members in the acculturation processes. ► Vietnamese refugee families in Norway keep close contact with extended kin. ► Aunts, uncles, and cousins are experienced as significant in the lives of many adolescents. ► Extended kin surfaced as especially important at critical stages in family life. ► This has implications for how we study refugee families in acculturation research.

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Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Business and International Management
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