Negotiating Identity and Belonging in a New Space: Opportunities and Experiences of African Youths in South Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Recruitment and Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Freedom and Opportunities
In Australia, even though everywhere people have their own tough times and all that but I’m free here. No more running away from war. Free education. I have a lot of opportunities to do things that I want to do than when I was back home. (Respondent 23)
Then, I also have this opportunity where I can go to any university without being denied for my right to study … it’s a very important gift that God gave to us, so to me I think we are lucky to be here. (Respondent 17)
It’s when you have freedom; you have the opportunity to study whatever you want, because that’s the hardest thing in Africa for a young girl, just to finish even year 11. To reach that stage it’s really hard where here you can study as many courses as you want, so it’s a privilege to be here, that’s what I always tell my friends. (Participant 12)
I think in Australia there are a lot of opportunities in education and all this kind of thing, but the downside of it is even if there’s education, if there’s no help to cope, you know, to cope with it then it becomes hard to use that opportunity. So, yes, there are opportunities, but we need help, something or someone to keep pushing us to get in there. (Respondent 14)
When we were in Africa, life was really, really terrible and then when we come to Australia—me personally, I thought I was going to have a better life. I’ve been here for nine years now. I wake up every morning; the only thing I see shining is the sun, but my life’s not shining. (participant 14)
Then you try to get a job and then no-one offering you job, so you find yourself a bit depressed, I guess. Then if you find yourself a bit depressed, what do you do? Drink up, hang out with your friends, go out, make yourself feel good. (Respondent 21)
What I know so far, there are a lot of young people actually get frustrated from school and finding no jobs or getting an appropriate job, so things like that, and people who are actually going under the trauma of homelessness and into drugs, into other things which are negative actually to the young people (respondent 15)
3.2. Freedom and Family Relationships
We are in Australia everyone is equal, and we know our rights and wrongs so that we argue with parents, like ‘this is wrong. This is what you’re supposed to say to me because you are wrong’ and then they don’t accept that. That’s how they take it to the community, because Africans consider that as being rude, you are not respecting your parents by talking back at them, but this is not what Australian culture says. Everyone is equal (Participant 12)
I’ve got pressure from my culture, like family at home, and then pressure from outside because I want to be—socially interact with others and they, my family, don’t want to accept that … I’m with my aunt here, and we have a lot of disagreement and stuff. Like you’re a girl, you don’t go out and meet friends except for close families, like a family that they know. Like I have friends from different places in Australia and stuff, but they don’t accept that they find it hard because they have different culture, like ‘no’. (Participant 10)
For me, I have to go to meet friend just to clear thing out … A lot of people, I think they isolate themselves from going out in the community or in a tribe with different people or getting involved in something … It always goes back to family, you know? Follow your culture with your family, listen to them, what they want you to do or just ignore them and do what you want to do to yourself. So, you’re between confused what-exactly how you’re going to help yourself to get out of that issue (Participant 10)
The good thing is that it’s you make your choices. At the end of the day, it’s up to you. Nobody makes the choices for you, but it’s up to you and if you’re willing to listen to anybody, take in their advice and sort of work out your life and stuff it’s up to you … You’re free, but all of that comes with consequences too. (Respondent 16)
3.3. Not Belonging and Being Torn between Two Places
Most youths are happy from outside, but inside they are not happy because they don’t have jobs. (Respondent 1)
Because you wake up every day and then, you know, you do the same thing, and you see the same people and the same things happening over and over again … You know you try to get—a job, trying to get to know people. Some of them tend to, you know, disengage from you and all that stuff. (Respondent 21)
So, I know one of the persons who has committed suicide. Two weeks before he died there was kind of—he said ‘I want to go back to Africa’, you know? He told family ‘I want to go back. I don’t want to live here. This place is no good’. (Respondent 7)
Yeah if you see—I have some people here you see—if you look at that you seem happy but inside you are not happy because I know—I have some cousins and my sister is here, but our mum is in Africa. (Respondent 1)
Let’s say if you want to marry now, you want a woman, you’ve got to have at least forty to sixty grands to marry the woman. You have to give them to the girl’s family and if you don’t have those you’re not going to get any girl. So that’s our—you know, it’s just our culture sometimes, it’s just different. Yeah, difficult. (Respondent 9)
Am I happy? I can say I am but like in the sense that I’ve got everything around me but in terms of that I’m not really—like I’m not really happy. Like back at home I was happy. Like we didn’t have food and all this stuff, but I still was happy. It’s just like maybe you can put it this way, here like you’ve been just surrounded by a fence around you, and you just want to escape, you know what I mean? (Respondent 21)
3.4. Using Available Resources
I don’t have my community here, like tribe; you know how Sudan, they have different tribes. So for me, I don’t have that community here so I get involved in other people’s communities, like other tribes. If they have program and stuff, I go there, just with my friends. (Participant 10)
If you are youth here in Australia, you are a very young person, you get so many supports and so many help, and you should be seeking to get that help. There are a lot of sports activities. If you’re good at it Australian people will take you, you know. For example, if you want to make music and you’re really good at it, you can get a scholarship. If you’re good at basketball as African youth, you can get a scholarship. (Respondent 20)
I think to be a young African youth in Australia—well, for me it’s a good gift, and it’s a great gift because no matter what happened to you if you’re still following your dream then I think it will be a good gift. (Respondent 17)
If you’re still alive, you are rich because one day you might become rich but if you’re dead, even though you are rich nobody will call you as rich because you are a dead person. That keeps other kids to push their lives, because they know one day, they will be rich. (Participant 11)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions and Research Contribution to the Body of Knowldge
- Recognition of the ways young people negotiate identity is important as these internal negotiations can be partly contributory to determinants of suicide among young migrants in Australia.
- Nurturing support for African youths is necessary because when they develop their identity and adapt to changes in the new environment, this support can foster successful resettlement.
- Developing culturally sensitive social support services for African youths is necessary for a successful integration.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No | Gender | Age at Data Collection | Country of Origin | Year Arrived in Adelaide |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | M | 25 | South Sudan | 2000 |
2 | F | 20 | Liberia | 2005 |
3 | F | 21 | Somalia | 2001 |
4 | F | 23 | Burundi | 2005 |
5 | F | 20 | Liberia | 2005 |
6 | F | 23 | Ghana | 2004 |
7 | F | 24 | Ethiopia | 2005 |
Participants | Gender | Age at Data Collection | Country of Origin | Year Arrived in Adelaide |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | M | 18 | DRC | 2010 |
2 | M | 20 | South Sudan | 2008 |
3 | F | 21 | Liberia | 2010 |
4 | M | 23 | South Sudan | 2009 |
5 | M | 20 | South Sudan | 2011 |
6 | M | 23 | Ethiopia | 2003 |
7 | F | 24 | Liberia | 2004 |
8 | M | 20 | Burundi | 2007 |
9 | M | 23 | South Sudan | 2007 |
10 | M | 25 | South Sudan | 2007 |
11 | M | 21 | Liberia | 2008 |
12 | M | 22 | DRC | 2005 |
13 | F | 25 | South Sudan | 2003 |
14 | F | 23 | South Sudan | 2005 |
15 | M | 20 | South Sudan | 2005 |
16 | F | 25 | South Sudan | 2008 |
17 | F | 21 | Liberia | 2008 |
18 | M | 25 | South Sudan | 2006 |
19 | M | 25 | South Sudan | 2003 |
20 | M | 20 | South Sudan | 2001 |
21 | M | 25 | South Sudan | 2006 |
22 | F | 18 | Liberia | 2005 |
23 | F | 23 | South Sudan | 2003 |
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Mude, W.; Mwanri, L. Negotiating Identity and Belonging in a New Space: Opportunities and Experiences of African Youths in South Australia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 5484. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155484
Mude W, Mwanri L. Negotiating Identity and Belonging in a New Space: Opportunities and Experiences of African Youths in South Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(15):5484. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155484
Chicago/Turabian StyleMude, William, and Lillian Mwanri. 2020. "Negotiating Identity and Belonging in a New Space: Opportunities and Experiences of African Youths in South Australia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 15: 5484. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155484
APA StyleMude, W., & Mwanri, L. (2020). Negotiating Identity and Belonging in a New Space: Opportunities and Experiences of African Youths in South Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(15), 5484. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155484