Author:
Adedeji Adekunle,Akintunde Tosin Yinka,Idemudia Erhabor S.,Ibrahim Elhakim,Metzner Franka
Abstract
Poor social integration is associated with poor quality of life among minority groups. The current study hypothesized that trust and sociability may significantly explain the quality of life performance among Sub-Saharan African migrants in Germany. Data from 518 migrants were analyzed. Hierarchical multiple linear regression models were calculated to assess the predictive effect of trust and sociability on aggregate quality of life. Results show that general trust and sociability explained about 21% of the variance in quality of life score (adjusted R2 = .206; p < .001) for the total sample. Socioeconomic and demographic features suggested an added predictive effect of about 8% for total sample (adjusted R2 = .279; p < .001), 10% for male (adjusted R2 = .322; p < .001) and 4% for female (adjusted R2 = .211; p < .001). The results support trust and sociability as essential in connecting to a new environment and enhancing the quality of life.
Funder
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung
Reference60 articles.
1. Subjective Integration and Quality of Life of Sub-saharan African Migrants in Germany;Adedeji;Public Health,2019
2. Cognitive and Structural Social Capital as Predictors of Quality of Life for Sub-saharan African Migrants in Germany;Adedeji;Appl. Res. Qual. Life,2019
3. Accessing Sub-Saharan African Migrant Group for Public Health Interventions, Promotion, and Research: the 5-Wave-Approach;Adedeji;Cms,2019
4. Socialization, Adaptation, Transnationalism, and the Reproductive Behavior of Sub-saharan African Migrants in France;Afulani;Popul. Res. Pol. Rev.,2015
5. Transnational Ties and the Health of Sub-saharan African Migrants: The Moderating Role of Gender and Family Separation;Afulani;Soc. Sci. Med.,2016
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献