Psikoloji Bölümü Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12514/74
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Browsing Psikoloji Bölümü Koleksiyonu by Publication Category "Kitap Bölümü - Uluslararası"
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Book Part Anlatı (Narrative) araştırması(2023) Ergün, NaifBu bölümün temel amacı anlatı araştırmanın ne olduğunu, felsefik daya-naklarını ve bir olgunun veya yaşamın anlatı aracılığıyla nasıl inceleneceğinive raporlaştırılacağını ortaya koymaktır. Bunu ortaya koymak için öncelikleanlatının (narrative) kavramsal boyutu, tarihsel gelişimi ve felsefik olgususunulmuştur. Sonra, anlatı araştırmanın genel çerçevesi çizilerek bir anlatınınarşatırmalarda kullanım tarzları ve anlatı araştırma türleri açıklanmıştır. Sonolarak, anlatı araştırmayla verilerin nasıl toplanılacağı ve anlatı araştırmaylaelde edilmiş bir verinin nasıl analiz edilip raporlaştırılacağı tartışılmıştır.Book Part Durum çalışması (Case study)(Çizgi Kitabevi, 2023) Ergün, NaifBu bölümün temel amacı nitel araştırma yöntemlerinden biri olan du-rum çalışmasının ne olduğu, bir olgunun, bir durumun veya bir olayın du-rum çalışmasıyla nasıl inceleneceği ve raporlaştırılacağını ortaya koymaktır.Bu amaç doğrultusunda öncelikle durum çalışmasının genel bir çerçevesiçizilmiştir. Sonra durum çalışmasının tanımı, amacı, felsefesi, içeriği ve tür-leri açıklanmıştır. Son olarak, durum çalışmasıyla yapılacak bir araştırmanınörneklemini oluşturma, veri toplama, verilerin analiz şekilleri ve raporlaştı-rılması tartışılmıştır.Book Part Extended Contact with Turks and Syrian Refugees' Intention to Migrate: The Mediating Roles of Ingroup and Outgroup Identification(Routledge, 2023) Özkan, Zafer; Ergün, NaifTurkey hosts millions of Syrian refugees while very little is known about the factors that relate to their voluntary intentions to return and migrate to Western countries. We proposed that extended contact with the host group members, the mere knowledge of ingroup members having positive interactions with others, can be associated with refugees’ intentions to return and migrate to Western countries. To investigate this idea, we examined associates of both positive and negative extended contact because negativity is also a part of intergroup interactions with a sample of Syrian adults (N = 358). We also examined mediating roles of ingroup identification (identification with Syrians) and identification with the host society (identification with Turks) for the associations between intergroup contact and intentions to migrate. Results revealed that positive and negative extended contact were associated, respectively, with reduced and greater return migration intentions via identification with the host society. Extended positive contact was related to reduced intentions to migrate to the West while negative contact did not have a significant association with the intention to migrate. Ingroup identification was solely associated with increased intentions to return. Intergroup contact and social identification processes maintain a potential to explain the underlying processes behind migration decisions among refugees.Book Part Extended contact with Turks and Syrian refugees' intention to migrate: The mediating roles of ingroup and outgroup identification(Taylor & Francis Group, 2022) Özkan, Zafer; Ergün, NaifTurkey hosts millions of Syrian refugees, while very little is known about the factors that relate to their voluntary intentions to return and migrate to Western countries. We proposed that extended contact with the host group members, the mere knowledge of ingroup members having positive interactions with others, can be associated with refugees’ intentions to return and migrate to Western countries. To investigate this idea, we examined associates of both positive and negative extended contact because negativity is also a part of intergroup interactions with a sample of Syrian adults (N = 358). We also examined mediating roles of ingroup identification (identification with Syrians) and identification with the host society (identification with Turks) for the associations between intergroup contact and intentions to migrate. Results revealed that positive and negative extended contact were associated, respectively, with reduced and greater return migration intentions via identification with the host society. Extended positive contact was related to reduced intentions to migrate to the West while negative contact did not have a significant association with the intention to migrate. Ingroup identification was solely associated with increased intentions to return. Intergroup contact and social identification processes maintain a potential to explain the underlying processes behind migration decisions among refugees.Book Part Grief Without Touch and Inability to Share the Pain in Pandemic(Centar za napredne studije, 2022) Işıker Bedir, DenizDeath is one of the most difficult experiences in interpersonal relationships. The loss of a beloved one indeed causes grief and mourning. The aim of this study is to explore traumatic grief experiences together at the time of the COVID-19 pandemic. A traumatic loss adds another layer to the experience of mourning and grief while making this experience more difficult to cope with. The sudden or unexpected occurrence of a loss or as a result of a disease can also be linked to how it is described traumatic. The mourning process is one of the most difficult traumatic experiences to talk about. Feeling the grief at home and without physical contact makes this experience even more challenging. As the world is facing with an unprecedented kind of pandemic, the relatives of the people losing their lives during this period are not only confronting a sudden death but also changing practices of funeral rituals. The fact that funeral rituals cannot be done by observing religious and traditional rules as in the previous periods due to the contagious nature of the COVID-19 people cannot share their grief and sufferings with their beloved ones. Furthermore, failure to perform funeral rituals including funeral ceremonies, condolences and farewells observed at the places of worship at mosques, churches, synagogues or cemevis due to their closure has had and will continue to have severe psychological consequences. It should be kept in mind that mourning and grief experienced after the loss of a beloved one during the COVID-19 pandemic does not change the uniqueness of this experience and the intense feelings that individuals encounter. Accordingly, autoethnographic storytelling method based on the uniqueness of the experience is a very useful method to make sense of this process, and to conduct research on this subject. Through online meetings by using this method, this research is based on the experiences of a participant who lost a beloved one due to the complications of the COVID-19 together with other members of the group. These individuals explained their loss and mourning experiences, and particularly how they experience the mourning process without physical contact during the pandemic. The evaluations made over these experiences demonstrate the significance of physical contact, the chance to say goodbye to the person died and funeral rituals. Keywords: Death, mourning, traumatic grief, Covid-19, autoethnography