Insights from Refugee Men as They Navigate Intersecting Settlement Challenges and Renegotiate Gender Identities

Abstract

Many refugee men have experienced significant trauma and face complex, interconnected challenges when settling into a new country. While the men require immediate assistance to meet their daily needs, such as securing housing and employment, in the longer term, they need support to build their confidence to navigate their new lives. Refugee men must negotiate unfamiliar social norms and learn “how to be a man” in their new home. Framed by intersectionality, the author examined the experiences of participants from an Australian refugee men’s social group to consider the challenges they faced and how these experiences overlapped with acculturation processes, such as renegotiating gender roles. Although the men’s group was not openly identified as a Domestic and Family Violence (DFV) prevention program, it embraced behaviour change strategies to develop trusting relationships within the group that encouraged conversations around gender norms to promote gender equality and family safety.

Description

This article is published under a Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND license.

Keywords

Men, Women, Refugee, Family Safety, Gender equality, Violence prevention, Domestic violence, Male identity, Acculturation, Gender norms

Citation

Hughes, M. (2025). Insights from Refugee Men as They Navigate Intersecting Settlement Challenges and Renegotiate Gender Identities. Australian Social Work, 1–13. https://doi.org/10.1080/0312407X.2025.2500532