Abstract

Colombia is the second country with the highest number of internally displaced persons. In the last 10 years, more than 400,000 young people carry, in their life experiences, the title of victims. The psychological and social circumstances that determine the lives of displaced young people in the world are not unknown. Fear, the poor resources for social adaptation available to them, and the possible reproduction of the cycle of violence, represent psychosocial risk factors in the young and displaced population. In this context, the Victims Law in Colombia stipulated various measures of repairment, including Relocation (the person or household victim of forced displacement decides to settle in some place, other than the one they were forced to leave) and Return (the person or the household victim of forced displacement decides to return to the place from which they were displaced, in order to settle indefinitely) provided the conditions of voluntariness, security, and dignity are present. A hypothesis that well-being will be better in the returnees was set, since they would strengthen the social support networks between neighbors and other victims in their old spaces of life. To test the hypothesis, the scales of Psychological Well-being, Social Well-being, the Satisfaction with Life Scale, and the Psychosocial Trauma Scale were applied to young returnees (n = 129) and relocated (n = 259) in Colombia. The Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analysis was performed to extract the general measure of well-being and psychosocial trauma followed by the comparison between the groups. Significance, power, and effect size indicators were obtained, and finally, the partial correlation between the groups was made in relation to psychosocial trauma and well-being. Results showed that returnees have greater well-being and clearer indicators (d = 0.365, 1-β = 0.996), with respect to that of relocated. In addition, the well-being of returnees has fewer trauma factors, who in turn are quasi-moderated by the situation of return or relocation.

Highlights

  • For 4 years in a row, Colombia has ranked second on the list of countries with the highest number of displaced people in the world (Alto Comisionado de las Naciones Unidas para los Refugiados [United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (ACNUR)], 2019)

  • The Law in Colombia has established the restitution of rights to restore, to the greatest degree possible, the state of life in which people were prior to their forced displacement, (Ley de 387, 1997, chapter II; Ley de 1448, 2011, chapter II; Unidad de Atención y Reparación Integral a las Víctimas [UARIV], 2020)

  • It was concluded that Model 2 had a better fit to the data than Model 1, based on parsimony normed fit index (PNFI) (PNFI1 = 0.15; PNFI2 = 0.5), but not with the parsimony goodness of fit index (PGFI) (PGFI1 = 0.65; PGFI2 = 0.53)

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Summary

Introduction

For 4 years in a row, Colombia has ranked second on the list of countries with the highest number of displaced people in the world (Alto Comisionado de las Naciones Unidas para los Refugiados [ACNUR], 2019). The Law in Colombia has established the restitution of rights to restore, to the greatest degree possible, the state of life in which people were prior to their forced displacement, (Ley de 387, 1997, chapter II; Ley de 1448, 2011, chapter II; Unidad de Atención y Reparación Integral a las Víctimas [UARIV], 2020) They have two options under the principles of security, voluntariness, and dignity: One is to return, if their decision is aimed at reintegrating to the place where they were forced to leave through the use of violence; and another is to relocate, if they choose to rebuild their life in a place other than the place of origin (Ley de 387, 1997, Chapter II). Which of the two conditions could be more favorable for the displaced, in light of its impact on well-being and the psychosocial trauma they have experienced?

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