Lost and Found

In The Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies, Volume 5, Issue 3 (2003), Dr. Catherine Ward and Dr. Irene Styles published the findings of a study examining the impact of migration on the identity of women who migrated from Britain and Ireland to Australia. This research explores grief reactions due to the multiple losses associated with migration (home, attachments, community, culture, etc.) and analyzes the coping strategies used by women to reconstruct their identities in a new environment.
Second-Generation Iranians in Sweden: A Story of Enduring Labor Market Disparities

The findings reveal that second-generation immigrants (G2) are less likely to be overqualified than their parents’ generation, indicating a form of intergenerational progress. However, they still face a moderately higher risk of overqualification compared to native Swedes. This disparity is particularly evident among those with tertiary education and those with non-Western backgrounds.