| Literature DB >> 26048135 |
Francesca Esposito1, José Ornelas2, Caterina Arcidiacono3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In recent years, border control and migration-related detention have become increasingly widespread practices affecting the lives of undocumented migrants, their families, and communities at large. In spite of the concern within academia, few studies have directly witnessed the life and experiences of people confined to migration-related detention centers. In the medical and psychological fields, a considerable body of research has demonstrated the pathogenic nature of detention in terms of mental health, showing an association between length of detention and severity of distress. Nevertheless, it was limited to the assessment of individuals' clinical consequences, mainly focusing on asylum seekers. There currently exists a need to adopt an ecological perspective from which to study detained migrants' experiences as context-dependent, and influenced by power inequalities. This paper addresses this gap. DISCUSSION: Drawing upon advances in community psychology, we illustrate an ecological framework for the study of migration-related detention contexts, and their effects on the lives of detained migrants and all people exposed to them. Making use of existing literature, Kelly's four principles (interdependence, cycling of resources, adaptation, succession) are analyzed at multiple ecological levels (personal, interpersonal, organizational, communal), highlighting implications for future research in this field. A focus on justice, as a key-dimension of analysis, is also discussed. Wellbeing is acknowledged as a multilevel, dynamic, and value-dependent phenomenon.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26048135 PMCID: PMC4458055 DOI: 10.1186/s12914-015-0052-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Int Health Hum Rights ISSN: 1472-698X
Description of Kelly’s Ecological Principles
| Interdependence | Inspired by the concept of ecosystem (i.e., the interdependence among living and nonliving elements of a biological community), this principle states that in changing structures and functions within social environments, the ways individuals and groups cope with events also vary, with a corresponding variation in the performance of adaptive and maladaptive roles. Furthermore, since systems can be viewed as a series of interdependent components, changes in one component reverberate throughout the system. |
|---|---|
| Cycling of Resources | Referring to how energy is created and transferred within biological systems (e.g., the food chain), this principle emphasizes the importance of looking at the developmental history of a social environment in terms of its management of resources (i.e., how resources are defined, created, distributed, used, exchanged, and transformed). |
| Adaptation | This principle is based on the evidence that the availability of nutrient substances affects the presence of an organism in a given habitat. It focuses on how environments affect individuals and groups through their demands, norms, values, structures, processes, options and constraints. At the same time, it draws attention to the strategies, and their dynamic evolution over time, which individuals and groups put in place to cope with, adapt to, and try to change the environments in which they live. |
| Succession | Based on the observation of progressive changes occurring in species structure, organic structure, and in the flow of energy distribution and community production within biological communities, this principle introduces a time perspective. Succession emphasizes how social environments are in a continuous and dynamic course of change that alters their ecology over time, and also with respect to the other principles. |
Ecological perspective with a focus on justice as applied to M-RD centers
| Interdependence | Personal |
| ∙ Effects of M-RD on detained migrants’ various spheres of life and person-environment interdependence | |
| ∙ The impact of mandatory deportation on the lives of migrants and their families | |
| ∙ Professionals’ experience of M-RD work environments and its effects in terms of other spheres of life/person-environment interdependences | |
| Interpersonal | |
| ∙ Interdependences among groups (detainees-detainees; professionals-professionals; detainees-professionals): Psychological sense(s) of community | |
| Organizational | |
| ∙ Interactions and mutual influences among entities/services within M-RD centers | |
| ∙ Interdependences between M-RD centers and external services | |
| Communal | |
| ∙ Interrelations between social, political, economic trends and M-RD centers (e.g., ways policies are filtered and implemented) | |
| Cycling of Resources | Personal |
| ∙ Personal/social resources that facilitate detainees’ task of surviving, furthering their resiliencies | |
| ∙ Personal/social resources that facilitate professionals’ adaptation to M-RD work environments, and the performance of their role | |
| Interpersonal | |
| ∙ Detainees’ and professionals’ social networks: nature and extent, quality of relationships, types of support exchanged | |
| Organizational | |
| ∙ Accessibility, acceptability, perceived utility of services within M-RD centers: effectiveness in addressing detainees’ needs | |
| ∙ Role of alternative settings and types of support exchanged within them | |
| Communal | |
| ∙ Role of local, national, supranational policies/other macro trends in defining how resources are created, managed, distributed among/within M-RD centers | |
| Adaptation | Personal |
| ∙ Strategies put in place by detainees to survive and resist in M-RD centers: Political agency | |
| ∙ Strategies put in place by professionals to adjust to M-RD work environments and perform their activity | |
| ∙ Diversity of experiences, conditions, needs that characterize migrants in detention | |
| Interpersonal | |
| ∙ Competitions between members of different groups (detainees vs. detainees; professionals vs. professionals; detainees vs. professionals; insiders vs. outsiders) | |
| Organizational | |
| ∙ Influence of norms, values, beliefs, processes, formal/informal power structures on the experiences of detainees and professionals | |
| ∙ Degree of cultural sensitivity/cultural competence of professionals | |
| Communal | |
| ∙ Influences of cultural, social, political, economic, factors: Social norms/beliefs regarding undocumented migration and M-RD, their causes, consequences, and possible solutions Immigration policies at local, national, supranational level and broad economic trends Role of public opinion and media | |
| Succession | Personal |
| ∙ Longitudinal understanding of the experiences of people subject to M-RD (pre-migration expectations/motivations; migratory trajectories; settlement experiences; documented/undocumented status over time; life in detention) | |
| ∙ Long-term effects of detention | |
| ∙ Post-detention/post-deportation experiences | |
| ∙ Long-term effects of working in M-RD centers (professionals’ work-related stress/burnout) | |
| Interpersonal | |
| ∙ Impact, over time, of internal shifts and external forces on the availability/distribution of power/resources within M-RD centers, and the relationships between groups | |
| Organizational | |
| ∙ Evolution of the assumptions underlying the creation of M-RD centers (historical development of undocumented migration/the mechanisms implemented to deal with it) | |
| ∙ Evolution of institutional cultures and practices within M-RD centers | |
| Communal | |
| ∙ Effects, over time, of social, economic, legislative, political changes on the lives of undocumented migrants/the ecology of M-RD centers (e.g., change in migration flows/routes and promulgation of new regulations) | |
| Justice | Personal (Distributive and Procedural Justice) |
| ∙ Detainees’ self-conception, self-consideration, self-esteem: internalization of the self-deprecating views about themselves as “illegal migrants” | |
| ∙ Occurrence of behaviors causing self-pleasure or self-suffering | |
| Interpersonal (Distributive, Procedural, Relational, and Developmental Justice) | |
| ∙ Distribution of power and resources between/within groups (professionals-detainees; detainees-detainees; professionals-professionals) | |
| ∙ Criteria and processes guiding the distribution of power and resources between/within groups | |
| ∙ Fairness, humanity, decency, respect at all level of relationships | |
| ∙ Adequacy of the expectations about detainees’ behavior with respect to their maturational stage | |
| ∙ Situations of power abuse (and related use of violence) | |
| Organizational (Distributive, Procedural, Relational/Cultural, and Informational Justice) | |
| ∙ Distribution of power, resources, services between/within M-RD centers | |
| ∙ Criteria and processes guiding the distribution of power, resources, services between/within M-RD centers | |
| ∙ Fairness of treatment received by detainees inside M-RD centers | |
| ∙ Degree of cultural sensitivity/cultural competence of professionals: occurrence of episodes of discrimination | |
| ∙ Comprehensiveness, transparency, clarity of information provided to detained migrants about their immigration/asylum cases and the rules that govern the life in detention | |
| ∙ Directionality of the information flow/adequacy of the information exchange between institutional actors | |
| Communal (Distributive, Procedural, Retributive, and Cultural Justice) | |
| ∙ Restriction of undocumented migrants’ access to basic rights enjoyed by national citizens (e.g., healthcare, education, safety), above all self-determination and freedom: multiple consequences | |
| ∙ Treatment of undocumented migrants on the basis of their status (administrative detention) | |
| ∙ Relationship between immigration status and the guarantee of rights established by national regulations/international agreements (e.g., Universal Declaration of Human Rights) | |
| ∙ Intertwinement between gender, sexuality, race or ethnicity, class and regimes of M-RD (which groups are more exposed to M-RD/deportation and how their condition shapes their experiences in detention) |
Fig. 1Kelly’s four principles, and the dimension of justice across multiple ecological levels of analysis. Interdependence, Cycling of Resources, Adaptation, Succession, and Justice are interdependent components, whose effects, across multiple ecological levels (personal, interpersonal, organizational, communal), are interactive rather than additive