Impact of a Pilot Peer-Mentoring Empowerment Program on Personal Well-Being for Migrant and Refugee Women in Western Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Global Migration Movements
1.2. Employment and Mental Health
1.3. Challenges Faced by Refugees and Migrants Seeking Employment
1.4. Employment-Focussed Programs and Interventions for Unskilled Migrant Women
1.5. Peer Support and Mentoring Programs
1.6. Community-Based Participatory Research and Personal Empowerment
1.7. Aim
- To develop a participatory peer mentoring program with refugee women themselves, using their existing strengths, the social capital available, and noting the systemic and structural barriers they face;
- To identify areas where additional support is required by refugee women in employment seeking, skill development, and personal empowerment;
- To evaluate the program and its perceived influence on refugee women’s personal empowerment, confidence, skill development, and health and well-being.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Community Partners
2.2. Development of the Mentoring Program
2.3. Participant Recruitment
2.3.1. Mentors
2.3.2. Mentees
2.3.3. Matching Mentors and Mentees
2.4. Ethical Considerations
2.5. EMPOWER Program Content
2.6. Interruptions Due to COVID-19 Public Health Measures
2.7. Data Collection and Analysis
2.8. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Social Connection
3.1.1. Reducing Isolation
“I think it has resulted in [Mentee] not being isolated in her home.”(Mentor 3)
“My mentor [name] has helped with me a lot in different way and never let me down, even we became friends now.”(Mentee 1)
“I’m not scared to speak to new people so that’s the best thing that [Mentor] gave it to me.”(Mentee 8)
3.1.2. Building Social Networks
“The opportunity for someone like [Mentee] to link in with people who can give her support and to have a little bit of a network of other people who are not just people with a DV background. Because I think with the current group, everyone having DV issues, you know it doesn’t, it doesn’t necessarily give her the same opportunities.”(Mentor 8)
“[Mentee] was able to practice English conversation and expand her network.”(Mentor 3)
“My network is now bigger than before. Now I know what the meaning of network, it helped a lot to have people around you.”(Mentee 2)
3.1.3. Cultural Understandings
“[Mentee] expressed interest in the events being held in Perth during the Christmas season. So, the exposure to the Australian way of life and you encourage her to experiment and enjoy that aspect.”(Mentor 4)
“[Mentor]Helpful for guidance, because we don’t know most of the things, how we going with the Australian culture.”(Mentee 9)
3.2. Self-Esteem
3.2.1. Confidence
“I was very scared and intimidated but this program just boosted my confidence basically.”(Mentee 3)
“Because I was so nervous before and when I see white people I’m like oh my God, they’re just going to, you know, judge me. So, after this program I’m not scared to speak to new people so that’s the best thing.”(Mentee 8)
“The most difficult part was getting that interaction going because a lot of occasions I felt that it’s the one-way street.”(Mentor 1)
3.2.2. Identifying Strengths
“[Mentee] completed the Strengths Exploration Worksheets which was a revelation to her of her many strengths.”(Mentor 4)
“Our discussion has reinforced for her, how strong and self-reliant she is.”(Mentor 8)
3.2.3. Trusting Self
“I learnt a lot about myself, I know how to discover more things in my personality that I can use it for my career.”(Mentee 2)
“After Empower session I think I started to trust myself more, even I realised how other people may accept me.”(Mentee 1)
3.3. Self-Efficacy
3.3.1. Simple Financial Management
“I shared some resources on managing finances. We talked through just basic stuff like the Barefoot Investor was an easy book to read.”(Mentor 9)
“Especially the lady was there with bank. How to save money, we do it twice I think. It was very nice.”(Mentee 6)
3.3.2. Legal Rights Knowledge
“It’s not just finding a job it’s helping her understand how superannuation works, what her rights are within that.”(Mentor 5)
3.3.3. Time Management
“We discussed the importance of managing time not only at the workplace but also at home and in our daily life.”(Mentor 7)
3.3.4. Occupation and Engagement
“[Mentor] actually went through my CV and helped me around that. So that was a really good outcome so finally I was able to get a job.”(Mentee 7)
“She [Mentee] even started working, it’s a small role but it’s a very good step.”(Mentor 2)
“She [Mentee] has just recently joined Certificate IV in accounting and she’s well on track of you know progressing further.”(Mentor 3)
“I’m studying now fashion design on TAFE, I’ll finish my certificate 4.”(Mentee 2)
“I’m enrolled to do interpreting diploma.”(Mentee 3)
“She [Mentor] gave me proper guidance regarding finding a job, how to make a proper CV and cover letter. And once finishing that internship… I left and found a job.”(Mentee 9)
3.4. Personal Health and Safety
3.4.1. COVID Information
“I thought talking about COVID 19 and giving information to [Mentee] is very important. So, we spent our whole session just talking on this topic.”(Mentor 7)
3.4.2. Cyber Safety
“I told [Mentee] she should be very careful while using emails, internet or social media. She said she uses emails and Facebook a lot but she didn’t know it can be unsafe to share personal information on it.”(Mentor 7)
3.5. Ongoing Needs
3.5.1. Overwhelmed with Stressors
“Minimal family support and no childcare support available.”(Mentor 1)
“She had personal health problems and some financial difficulties.”(Mentor 11)
“How do I help a mentee who cannot pay the rent?”(Mentor 9)
“Difficult situation as her mother has disappeared back home and she cannot go back to look for her as her ex-husband will not sign for her children to have passports.”(Mentor 8)
“I observed that she is quite depressed and isolated. She has very low self-esteem and also she has some health issues.”(Mentor 7)
3.5.2. Desire for Mental Health Support
“Some people are depressing and like you know, mental, mental health part. If you guys can cover those areas, that would be great.”(Mentee 8)
“I think mental health is important for us like migrant, how to raise a kid for migrant, even I think about psychology sessions. It will be very good if you provide a program.”(Mentee 1)
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations and Strengths
4.2. Recommendations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Group Duration | Participants | Workshops Delivered | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|
Group 1 commenced September 2019 | 10 mentees 9 mentors | English for Employment Employment Skills Financial Management | 9 mentees 10 mentees 10 mentees |
Group 2 commenced March 2020 | 6 mentees 5 mentors 1 | English for Employment Employment Skills Financial Management | 5 mentees 4 mentees 5 mentees |
Group 3 commenced between August 2020 | 8 mentees 7 mentors 1 | Financial Management and Starting a New Business 2 Employment Skills 2,3 | 5 mentees 7 mentees |
Group 4 commenced between April–August 2021 | 5 mentees 1 mentor | ||
Group 5—group mentoring sessions held between September and October 2021 | 4 mentees 4 2 mentors | Session One 3 Session Two 3 Session Three 3 | 4 mentees 4 mentees 3 mentees |
Mentors | Mentees | ||
---|---|---|---|
Total Mentors | 21 | Total Mentees | 32 |
Country of Origin | N | Country of Origin | N |
Australia 1; Bangladesh 1; Egypt 1; England 1; France 1; Italy 1; Lebanon 1; Mongolia 1; Nepal 1; Serbia 1; Singapore 1 | 11 | Bangladesh 1; China 1; Ethiopia 1; Lebanon 1; Libya 1; Lithuania 1; Pakistan 1; Scotland 1; Somalia 1; Thailand 1; Togo | 11 |
India | 8 | Egypt | 3 |
Sri Lanka | 2 | India | 2 |
Iran | 2 | ||
Iraq | 2 | ||
Malaysia | 2 | ||
Mongolia | 3 | ||
Philippines | 2 | ||
Sri Lanka | 5 | ||
Age in years | Age in years | ||
Mean (SD) | 46.05 (12.26) | Mean (SD) | 41.66 (8.79) |
Range | 26–70 | Range | 25–62 |
Years in Australia | Years in Australia | ||
Mean (SD) | 19.12 (15.97) | 0–2 | 8 |
Range | 2.5–63 | 3–5 | 8 |
6–9 | 4 | ||
10 or more years | 12 | ||
Highest Level of Education | N | Highest Level of Education | N |
Technical and Further Education (TAFE)/Technical College | 2 | Never attended school | 1 |
University | 19 | 7–9 years of schooling | 2 |
12 or more years of schooling | 2 | ||
Trade or technical qualification beyond school | 2 | ||
University degree | 25 | ||
Main Language Spoken | N | Main Language Spoken | N |
Arabic | 2 | Amharic 1; Bangladeshi 1; Ewe 1; Farsi 1; Lithuanian 1; Mandarin 1; Persian 1; Scottish 1; Somali 1; Tagalog 1; Tamil 1; Thai 1; Urdu 1 | 13 |
Bangladeshi 1; French 1; Italian 1; Malayalam 1; Mandarin 1; Mongolian 1; Nepali 1; Serbian 1; Sinhalese 1; Tamil 1; Urdu 1 | 11 | Arabic | 7 |
English | 2 | English | 3 |
Hindi | 6 | Mongolian | 2 |
Sinhalese | 5 | ||
Telugu | 2 | ||
Industry of Employment | N | Visa Category (top 3) | N |
Aged Care and Disability | 1 | Partner | 7 |
Community Services | 6 | Refugee | 4 |
Finance | 1 | Student | 8 |
Government | 1 | Other | 13 |
Hospital | 2 | ||
Self-employed/Freelance | 6 | ||
Tertiary Education | 4 | ||
Employment status pre-program | N | ||
Employed | 9 | ||
Unemployed | 23 |
Theme | Sub-Theme |
---|---|
Social Connection | Reducing isolation Building social networks Cultural understandings |
Self-esteem | Confidence Identifying strengths Trusting self |
Self-efficacy | Simple financial management Legal rights Time management Occupation and engagement |
Personal health and safety | COVID-19 information Cyber safety |
Ongoing needs | Overwhelmed with stressors Desire for mental health support |
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Share and Cite
Gower, S.; Jeemi, Z.; Wickramasinghe, N.; Kebble, P.; Forbes, D.; Dantas, J.A.R. Impact of a Pilot Peer-Mentoring Empowerment Program on Personal Well-Being for Migrant and Refugee Women in Western Australia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 3338. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063338
Gower S, Jeemi Z, Wickramasinghe N, Kebble P, Forbes D, Dantas JAR. Impact of a Pilot Peer-Mentoring Empowerment Program on Personal Well-Being for Migrant and Refugee Women in Western Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(6):3338. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063338
Chicago/Turabian StyleGower, Shelley, Zakia Jeemi, Niranjani Wickramasinghe, Paul Kebble, David Forbes, and Jaya A R Dantas. 2022. "Impact of a Pilot Peer-Mentoring Empowerment Program on Personal Well-Being for Migrant and Refugee Women in Western Australia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 6: 3338. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063338