Abstract

This study aimed to test whether or not where people come from and move to impacts their method for dealing with stress. We investigated this research question among newcomers crossing between the rice and wheat farming regions in China—south and north China, respectively. New evidence suggests wheat-farming agriculture fosters a coping strategy of changing the environment (primary coping), while rice-farming regions foster the converse strategy of fitting into the environment (secondary coping). Using two longitudinal studies on newcomers at universities located in both the rice and wheat farming regions, we hypothesized that students from south China (rice region) at a university in north China (wheat region) would use more primary coping and it would lead to better adaptation (Study 1). In contrast, students from wheat-farming regions moving to a rice university would benefit from secondary coping as an effective strategy for buffering stress (Study 2). Results indicated that for students from rice-farming regions who were studying universities in wheat-farming regions, secondary coping was damaging and attenuated the stress-adaptation relationship. However, in study 2, the reverse was found, as secondary coping was found to buffer the negative effects of stress on sociocultural adaptation for students from wheat-farming regions who were studying at universities in rice-farming regions. This study lends further support to the theory that ecological factors impact how individuals cope with the acculturative stress of moving to a new environment.

Highlights

  • Around 258 million people worldwide currently reside outside their country of birth

  • Sociocultural adaptation was regressed on control variables

  • Simple slope analyses were performed using ModGraph. These analyses showed that under conditions of high initial stress, secondary coping exacerbated the negative effects of acculturative stress on sociocultural adaptation

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Summary

Introduction

Around 258 million people worldwide currently reside outside their country of birth. This number is overshadowed by an estimated 700 million people who migrate within their birth country’s borders [1]. Mobility is accelerating— due to urbanization in Africa and Asia [2]—internal migration has to date received little attention from social psychologists. Scholars s have highlighted some important cultural differences within cultures [3, 4], which would suggest that intra-cultural travel, like its inter-cultural counterpart, requires similar adaptation to the novel cultural environment. We test the idea that within-country cultural differences will moderate the utility or effectiveness of different adaptation styles or strategies used by Chinese university students.

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