TY - JOUR
T1 - Psychological well-being and ethnic identities of Jewish adolescents planning emigration from Russia and Ukraine to Israel
T2 - Changes during the post-perestroika period
AU - Tartakovsky, Eugene
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was partly supported by a grant from the Chief Scientist's Office at the Israeli Education Ministry. The author thanks the psychologists, social workers, and counselors working in the Na’ale program in Israel, the psychologists cooperating with the Na’ale program in Russia and Ukraine, and the Na’ale Administration for their help in conducting the study. The author is grateful to the adolescents who participated in this study.
PY - 2008/11
Y1 - 2008/11
N2 - This study examines psychological well-being and ethnic identities of Jewish adolescents planning emigration from Russia and Ukraine to Israel. Measurements were conducted in 1999 (n = 654) and in 2005 (n = 243). The adolescents were questioned about half a year before they left their homeland. In Russia, adolescents who planned emigration in 2005 had less emotional and behavioral problems and suffered less from loneliness than their peers in 1999. In Ukraine, no improvement was found in psychological well-being; moreover, the school competence of adolescents who planned emigration in 2005 was lower compared to their peers in 1999. Adolescents who planned emigration from Russia and Ukraine in 2005 reported a more positive attitude towards their homeland and stronger identification with the ethnic majority in their homeland than the adolescents who planned emigration in 1999. The emigrants' attitude towards Israel did not change from 1999 to 2005. Their identification with Jews was weaker in 2005 as compared with 1999. In both cohorts, the adolescents' attitude towards Israel was more positive than their attitude towards Russia or Ukraine, and their identification with Jews was stronger than that with Russians or Ukrainians. In 1999, Russian/Ukrainian and Jewish-Israeli facets of the emigrants' ethnic identity were contradictory, while they were complementary in 2005.
AB - This study examines psychological well-being and ethnic identities of Jewish adolescents planning emigration from Russia and Ukraine to Israel. Measurements were conducted in 1999 (n = 654) and in 2005 (n = 243). The adolescents were questioned about half a year before they left their homeland. In Russia, adolescents who planned emigration in 2005 had less emotional and behavioral problems and suffered less from loneliness than their peers in 1999. In Ukraine, no improvement was found in psychological well-being; moreover, the school competence of adolescents who planned emigration in 2005 was lower compared to their peers in 1999. Adolescents who planned emigration from Russia and Ukraine in 2005 reported a more positive attitude towards their homeland and stronger identification with the ethnic majority in their homeland than the adolescents who planned emigration in 1999. The emigrants' attitude towards Israel did not change from 1999 to 2005. Their identification with Jews was weaker in 2005 as compared with 1999. In both cohorts, the adolescents' attitude towards Israel was more positive than their attitude towards Russia or Ukraine, and their identification with Jews was stronger than that with Russians or Ukrainians. In 1999, Russian/Ukrainian and Jewish-Israeli facets of the emigrants' ethnic identity were contradictory, while they were complementary in 2005.
KW - Adolescent immigrants
KW - Ethnic identity
KW - Israel
KW - Psychological well-being
KW - Russia
KW - Ukraine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=56549099098&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2008.07.001
DO - 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2008.07.001
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AN - SCOPUS:56549099098
SN - 0147-1767
VL - 32
SP - 553
EP - 564
JO - International Journal of Intercultural Relations
JF - International Journal of Intercultural Relations
IS - 6
ER -