Title
The Karen Chemical Dependency Collaboration: Lessons Learned in Utilizing a Collaborative Framework to Promote Refugee Integration
Department/School
Social Work
Date of this version
2018
Document Type
Article
Keywords
refugee resettlement, substance abuse, refugee integration, cultural adaptation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.18060/21654
Abstract
While refugee integration is defined as a bidirectional process of mutual learning and adaptation, in practice, the U.S. resettlement program continues to emphasize refugees’ acculturation processes and places little emphasis on cultural or logistical adaptation of existing services. When adaptation does happen, it is often structured around dominant notions of health and well-being. There is a need to explore bidirectional integration processes and existing systems adaptations to accommodate people with refugee backgrounds at the institutional level. This article details a framework to build a sustainable collaboration between a refugee community and existing health and social service systems to reduce harmful alcohol use. The conceptual framework emphasizes three components: 1) adaptation of refugees’ indigenous expertise, networks, systems, and resources; 2) adaptation of existing systems to serve new groups in culturally relevant and effective ways; and 3) the participatory processes through which refugees and existing systems collaborate to achieve mutual goals. This paper describes the application of this framework and concludes with a discussion of lessons to support replication of the framework in other settings. Lessons learned include: equalizing power, paying attention to relationships and roles, engaging in deep cultural adaption of interventions, and building individual and organizational capacity to support partners.
Volume
18
Issue
3
Published in
Advances in Social Work
Citation/Other Information
McCleary, J. S., Horn, T., Toe, P. W., Dwee, E., & Sniffen, S. (2018). The Karen Chemical Dependency Collaboration: Lessons Learned in Utilizing a Collaborative Framework to Promote Refugee Integration. Advances in Social Work, 18(3), 911-929. https://doi.org/10.18060/21654