1 / 12

Housing of Immigrants: Some Psychological Issues

Housing of Immigrants: Some Psychological Issues. Cheuk Ng, PhD Associate Professor, Psychology Athabasca University, Alberta. A presentation at the 72 nd annual convention of the Canadian Psychological Association, June 3, 2011, Toronto. Immigrant Statistics.

Télécharger la présentation

Housing of Immigrants: Some Psychological Issues

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Housing of Immigrants: Some Psychological Issues Cheuk Ng, PhD Associate Professor, Psychology Athabasca University, Alberta A presentation at the 72nd annual convention of the Canadian Psychological Association, June 3, 2011, Toronto.

  2. Immigrant Statistics • Recent immigrants origins: Asia and Middle East • Urban (89%) • Visible minorities (70%) • Collectivist societies: interdependence; family (Triandis, 2001) • High-contact cultures (Hall, 1966)

  3. Acceptable Housing The National Occupancy Standard (CMHC, 2005) • Adequate: not requiring any major repairs • Affordable: costs < 30% of before-tax household income • Suitable: enough bedrooms for household composition “crowded”: > 1 person per room

  4. Housing Patterns • Larger households: more children, multiple-families, shared accommodation • Multiple families households – higher ownership, inadequate housing less likely, unaffordable less likely; “crowded” • Recent immigrants from visible minority groups: South Asia; family class; home ownership • Over time -- become similar to non-immigrants’ pattern • Source: CMHC (2005, 2007, 2008, 2009)

  5. Living Arrangements • Home-sharing literature: 4 incentives (Ahrentzen, 2003; Hemmens & Hoch, 1996) • emergency situation and need • subsidy or residential improvement • growth and change or social support • dependency or caretaking • Applicable to immigrants, especially recent immigrants • In addition, cultural values in collectivist societies (e.g., filial piety in Asian societies)

  6. Dwelling Densities around the world • CountryPerson/roomCountryPerson/room • Canada 0.5 Mexico 1.5 • U.S. 0.5 Bahamas 1.3 • France 0.7 Nicaragua 2.6 • Pakistan 3.0 Egypt 1.3 • India 2.7 Syria 2.0 • Sri Lanka 2.2 Turkey 1.3 • South Korea 1.1 Czech Rep. 1.0 • Azerbaijan 2.1 Bulgaria 0.6 • Source: United Nations (1995, 2001). Compendium of human settlement statistics.

  7. Density and Crowding • Distinction (Stokols, 1972) • Modest linear correlation (Gove & Hughes, 1983); Curvilinear? (Fuller et al., 1994) • Cultural differences in perceived crowding? (Evans, Lepore, & Allen, 2000) -- frame of reference (Loo & Ong, 1984); may change over time • Regulations reflect implicit values of a culture -- What is “proper” living arrangement? -- What is crowded? (Myers, Baer, & Choi, 1996; Pader,1994, 2002)

  8. High Density Living • Definition and measurement (e.g., person/room) • Research in North America – mostly negative on mental health (e.g., stress); some no effect • Theoretical perspectives: -- social stimulation overload -- behavioral restriction /competition for resources • Behavioral responses: -- social withdrawal -- aggression

  9. High Density Living (2) • Cultural differences?(Gillis et al., 1986; Gove et al., 1983) -- Evans et al. (2000): a myth • Privacy (Altman, 1975) -- individual vs. group -- regulating mechanisms: * physical environment (e.g., territory) * Verbal * Non-verbal (e.g., personal space) * Norms

  10. High Density Living(3) • Research in Asian countries -- Thailand (Fuller et al., 1996a, 1996b): -- Japan (Homma, 1990; Omata, 1992) -- India (Jain, 1993; Lepore et al., 1991) -- Hong Kong (Chan, 1999) • Curvilinear relationship? An ideal range? (Regoeczi, 2002; Gabe & Williams, 1986) -- peak at a high dwelling density in Asian cultures than in North America? • Immigrants shift in perception, behavioral response/ privacy regulation mechanisms over time ?

  11. Conclusions • Recent immigrants to Canada may not perceive “crowding” as problematic as the housing occupancy regulations suggest. • Any effects of moving from high-density living to low-density living for these recent immigrants? • Census statistics show patterns of housing occupancy change over time. Research is needed to examine the psychological process through which immigrants acculturate in terms of reactions to density and spatial needs.

  12. Questions? Thank you!

More Related