While most studies of the stresses experienced by minorities, migrants,
and refugees focus on North America, this work assumes an unusually
broad scope. African-Americans, Latin Americans, Hutterites, Southeast
Asians, and Native Americans are all considered in the context of the
U.S. and Canada. However, separate chapters also discuss North Africans
in France, Turks in Belgium, native culture in New Zealand, Jews inside
and outside Israel, Gypsies in Europe, and Germans migrating west in
their newly united nation. This unique look at the stresses facing such
groups is an important resource for researchers, practitioners, and
graduate students in clinical psychology, counseling, and psychiatric
social work.