TY - BOOK TI - Migration, Resilience, Vulnerability and Migrants' Health SN - 9783036555577 PY - 2022/// CY - Basel PB - MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute KW - Development studies KW - bicssc KW - Humanities KW - Social interaction KW - 1.5 generation migrants KW - access to health KW - access to health care KW - acculturation KW - adaptation KW - African diaspora KW - African migrant and refugee youths KW - African migrants KW - African youths KW - aftercare support KW - air quality KW - alcohol and other drugs KW - asylum seeker KW - asylum seekers KW - Australia KW - Baidu Index KW - barriers KW - belonging KW - body mass index KW - bordering KW - CALD KW - child welfare KW - Chile KW - China KW - communication KW - contraception KW - COVID-19 KW - cross-cultural KW - cross-sectional survey KW - depression KW - depressive symptoms KW - disability KW - disaster health KW - discrimination KW - elderly KW - emergency department KW - emigration and immigration KW - emotional regulation strategy KW - ethnicity KW - expatriates KW - expert knowledge KW - expressive suppression KW - family separation KW - female KW - forced migration KW - fuzzy-logic cognitive mapping KW - general practice KW - health KW - health behaviors KW - health disparities KW - health promotion KW - health protection KW - health risk KW - health-seeking behavior KW - healthcare access KW - healthcare services KW - humanitarian emergencies KW - hypertension KW - identity discourse KW - immigration KW - income KW - integration KW - integration process KW - internal migration experience KW - leaving care KW - Lebanon KW - life satisfaction KW - mental burden KW - mental health KW - mental health problems KW - mental health service KW - mentoring KW - middle-aged KW - migrant health KW - migrant workers KW - migrant youth KW - migrants KW - migration KW - migrations KW - mixed methods KW - n/a KW - needs assessment KW - non-clinical population KW - non-communicable diseases KW - non-urgent complaints KW - North Korean refugee youths (NKRYs) KW - northeast KW - patient engagement KW - patient-centered care KW - politics of belonging KW - population migration KW - post-migration risk factors KW - post-migratory stressors KW - primary healthcare KW - protective shelter KW - psychosocial health care KW - psychosocial support KW - public health KW - qualitative analyses KW - qualitative method KW - qualitative research KW - race KW - racism KW - refugee KW - refugee health KW - refugees KW - religiosity KW - resettlement challenges KW - resilience KW - search query KW - self-efficacy KW - settlement intention KW - sexual and reproductive health KW - social changes KW - social work KW - South Australia KW - south-south migration KW - Spain KW - special migrants' populations KW - superdiversity KW - survey research KW - Syria KW - system models KW - Thailand KW - time pressure KW - transition to adulthood KW - unaccompanied KW - unaccompanied migrant young people KW - unaccompanied minor refugees KW - urban agglomeration KW - urban refugees KW - urban setting KW - vulnerability KW - well-being KW - Westerners KW - women KW - work KW - young women KW - youth N1 - Open Access N2 - In recent times, particularly during the 21st century, there have been significant increases and changes in international migration and resettlement patterns due to factors such as people's ability to travel, ease of communication and technology, and civil unrest and conflicts. Global populations have increased and integrated across settings, challenging the differentiation between types of migrants, such as refugees (those migrating because of factors such as civil unrest, wars, persecution, or other vulnerability) and economic migrants. This mixture of migration and resettlement patterns will continue for generations due to these diverse, multicultural, and complex communities and we will need more research to provide evidence to inform nations and global responses to any emergences. This Special Issue of the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health focused on the migration, resilience, and vulnerability and general migrants' health accepted original research papers, case reports, reviews, and conference papers. Articles dealing with new approaches to address issues, including migration (opportunities, challenges, and vulnerability), migrants' health, settlement, and migrant health-care service access and specific migrants' subgroups were also accepted. Other manuscript types including methodological papers, position papers, policy briefs and reports, and commentaries were sought. We accepted manuscripts from different disciplines, including public health, social and behavioural sciences, anthropology, epidemiology, psychology, and demography. This reprint compiles 30 publications UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/93858 UR - https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/6288 ER -