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首页> 外文期刊>Social science and medicine >'What kept me going': A qualitative study of avoidant responses to war-related adversity and perpetration of violence by former forcibly recruited children and youth in the Acholi region of northern Uganda
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'What kept me going': A qualitative study of avoidant responses to war-related adversity and perpetration of violence by former forcibly recruited children and youth in the Acholi region of northern Uganda

机译:“让我走了”:对乌干达北部Acholi地区的前期强行招募儿童和青年的避免对战争相关的逆境和暴力的避免反应的定性研究

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This qualitative study investigates what, according to 36 former forcibly recruited women and men, enabled them to "keep on going" during and after their forced recruitment in the twenty-year-long civil war in northern Uganda. Furthermore, the study conveys the ways most of the former forcibly recruited kept on going and today cope with ongoing war-related adversity and difficult reintegration processes without relying on psycho-social intervention. Thirty-five of the 36 women and men were forcibly recruited when they were children by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) from the Acholi region of northern Uganda. Over the course of five visits to the Acholi region from 2012 to 2016, 10 months of ethnographic fieldwork was carried out involving interviews and participant observation. The 36 Acholi women and men shared how they experienced and responded to suffering from brutal torture and being forced to perpetrate often lethal violence against fellow Acholi who had tried to escape the LRA. The article provides an overview of the responses to this war-related adversity and the results document how avoidant coping is the preferred and most common coping response among the 36 former forcibly recruited women and men in this study. We take an interdisciplinary approach to discussing how these avoidant coping responses resonate with psycho-traumatology research on responses to war-related trauma and with conceptualizations of resilience. We end with the argument that avoidant responses to war-related adversity, when faced in clinical and diagnostic settings, should not be understood exclusively from a biomedical perspective: Responses to war-related adversity must be carefully investigated in collaboration with the human beings who have experienced the war-related adversity and based on integrative and emic approaches that consider the locally situated notions of how to cope with adversity and "keep on going" in their own right. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
机译:这项定性研究调查了根据36个前期招聘的妇女和男子,使他们在乌干达北部二十年内战中的强迫招聘期间和之后“继续前进”。此外,该研究传达了大多数前者强行招募的方式,随着持续的战争相关的逆境和困难的重返社会流程,而不依赖于心理社会干预。 36名妇女和男子中有三十五次被担任乌干达ACHOLI地区的耶和华抵抗军(LRA)。从2012年到2016年到2012年到2016年的acholi地区的五个途径,涉及访谈和参与者观察10个月的民族统计实地。 36名ACHOLI妇女和男子分享了他们如何经历并回应遭受残酷的酷刑,并且被迫犯下致力于致力于逃离LRA的acholi的致命暴力行为。本文概述了对此战争相关的逆境和结果文件的答复,以及如何避免应对本研究中36名前期强行招聘妇女和男子的首选和最常见的应对。我们采取跨学科方法来讨论这些避免应对的反应如何与心理创伤性研究产生对战争相关创伤的响应以及恢复力的概念化。我们结束了避免对战争相关的逆境的反应,当面对临床和诊断环境时,不应专门从生物医学的角度来理解:必须在与拥有的人的人合作仔细调查对战争相关的逆境的反应经历了与战争相关的逆境,并基于综合和杠杆方法,以考虑如何应对逆境的当地位于逆境,并在自己的权利中“继续前进”。 (c)2017年作者。 elsevier有限公司出版

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