Abstract

Trust is of particular relevance to refugee populations, given the adverse, often protracted and liminal nature of the refugee journey. What trust means, how it shapes and is shaped by this journey, is crucially important for this population group and it can vary substantially. The extent, range and nature of research activity in this area are limited; this article therefore reports on a systematic scoping review that explored trust amongst refugees and asylum seekers in resettlement settings. Studies were included if they were primary research and explored trust amongst refugees and asylum seekers in a resettlement context and excluded if trust was not a major focus of the study (i.e. a number of studies were excluded that explored related concepts, such as social capital), if the study did not identify participants as refugees or asylum seekers or the study examined trust in a transitory setting. Following the application of inclusion and exclusion criteria, 24 studies remained, which were reviewed and analysed. Sixteen studies used qualitative methods, six used quantitative methods and one used mixed methods. Trust was presented as fundamentally relational, taking shape between and within refugees, asylum seekers and others. Trust was also presented as temporal and contextual, across refugee journeys, hardships experienced and resettlement. A major theme was the fundamental need in resettlement for a restoration of lost or damaged trust.

Highlights

  • Trust is indispensable for human life and society

  • This study investigated the issue of trust, or mistrust, in relation to single adult asylum seekers and asylum seeker families compulsorily dispersed across England

  • This study explores the concept of mistrust amongst refugee populations by drawing on qualitative interviews with unaccompanied asylum-seeking minors living in the Republic of Ireland

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Summary

Introduction

Trust is indispensable for human life and society. Life would be chaotic and unpredictable (Luhmann, 2018); we would be ‘suspicious of the friends we turn to for companionship, fearful of the specialists we must depend upon for vital services and information, and even distrustful of the food we must consume to nourish life’ (Worchel, 1979). Trust is of particular relevance to refugee populations, given the adverse, often protracted and liminal nature of the refugee journey. How it shapes and is shaped by this journey, can vary substantially. When fleeing violence or persecution, it may not be clear who or what to trust: some may be betrayed and distrust may serve as a means to survive. Many will take dangerous journeys to safety, while others will spend protracted periods in camps, where they continue to face unsafe and uncertain conditions

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