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Title: The effects of


1
  • The effects of
  • mens labor migration
  • on rural womens socioeconomic conditions, social
    networks, and reproductive behavior
  • in Armenia
  • (preliminary results of a sociological study)

2
Prepared by
  • Victor Agadjanian, PhD
  • Cecilia Menjívar, PhD
  • Arizona State University, USA
  • Gohar Shahnazaryan, PhD
  • Sociology Masters students
  • Yerevan State University

3
Conceptual framework and research questions
  • How does husbands migration affect
  • Households material conditions?
  • Womens economic activities?
  • Marriage and family dynamics?
  • Womens social ties?
  • Womens health, reproductive behavior and plans?
  • Womens gender roles and attitudes?
  • Psychological issues and religion?

4
The study design
  • Funded by a grant from Arizona State University
    Institute for Social Science Research and the
    School of Social and Family Dynamics
  • Conducted as part of a Masters level
    Sociological Practicum course
  • Students involved in all stages of the project
    (including this presentation!)
  • It is a pilot study which (hopefully) will lead
    to a larger study

5
The Study Design (cont.)
  • The study was conducted in rural areas of two
    marzesTavush and Ararat
  • Tavusha poorer, more economically depressed
    marz, with a high level of out-migration.
  • Ararata more affluent and economically dynamic
    marz, closer to Yerevan, less out-migration
  • Data collection
  • Carried out in late September-October 2005, i.e.
    just before most seasonal migrants return home
  • A probability survey of 1040 married women in 52
    villages
  • A community (village) survey
  • Qualitative in-depth interviews with 27 women
    whose husbands are current migrants or were in
    migration in 2005
  • All participants received a symbolic gift (coffee
    chocolate)

6
Ararat
7
Tavush
8
Ararat
9
Tavush
10
The Survey Sampling
  • 26 villages in each marz (52 in total) were
    selected with the probability proportional to
    estimated population size
  • Within each village, the goal was to interview
    20 married women aged 18-45 10 whose husbands
    are current/recent migrants and 10 whose husbands
    are not current/recent migrants
  • In each village, 10 interviewers, 2 interviews
    per interviewer
  • In each village, 10 first addresses were
    selected randomly from the village household
    lists
  • The remaining 10 (or more if prior non-response)
    addresses were selected using a random walking
    algorithm.
  • Important the survey was not meant to produce a
    representative migration profile of the rural
    population but to compare women whose husbands
    are migrants and those whose husbands are not
    migrants.

11
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12
Sampling (cont.)
  • Locating second respondent
  • If the first respondent is married to a
    non-migrant, the second should be one married to
    a migrant (and vice versa)
  • If no respondent of desired migration status is
    found at fifth house, the residents are asked
    where the nearest woman with a migrant husband
    lives. That woman is interviewed.
  • If in the fifth visited residence no one knows
    where a woman with desired characteristics lives,
    the interviewer goes to a next residence
    following the same algorithm to interview a
    married woman regardless of her migration status.

13
Sampling (cont.)
  • Challenges
  • Availability of household rosters if not
    available, we selected starting points in
    different parts of the village
  • Availability of people (many are busy in the
    fields, working, attending events, etc.)
  • Availability of migrants, especially in Tavush
  • Migration as a family or by unmarried men
  • ????? by married men relatively uncommon
  • Migrant households are spatially clustered
  • Resulting sample
  • 62 Non-migrants 38 Migrants
  • Lower percentage of migrants in Tavush than in
    Ararat
  • Why? A different pattern of migration

14
Survey instrument
  • Five parts
  • Respondents demographic characteristics
  • Marriage and husbands characteristics (including
    husbands migration)
  • Health and reproduction
  • Social ties and community
  • Gender attitudes
  • Household characteristics and time-use

15
Fieldwork Challenges and solutions
  • Timing of fieldwork Weekendsto maximize
    availability of both respondents and
    interviewers, but
  • In rural areas weekends are no less busy that
    weekdays, especially during the harvest time ?
    Whenever possible, the selected households were
    revisited until the respondent is available
  • Elections in some villages and related village
    politics ? We emphasized that our study had
    nothing to do with politics
  • Unavailability of community leaders on weekends ?
    We notified them in advance about our study. In a
    few cases, no advance contact could be
    established and no residential lists could be
    obtained.
  • Interviewer-Respondent Age difference no
    apparent effect
  • Interviewer-Respondent cultural background
    differences no apparent effects
  • Some respondents thought we represent the health
    services

16
Fieldwork Challenges and solutions (cont.)
  • Some thought we represented social assistance
    agencies and expected assistance (or saw threat
    to assistance they were already receiving) ?
    underreporting of wealth, income?
  • Some women suspected that we represented
    religious organizations We emphasized that we
    dont
  • Yet, overall the refusal rate was very low
  • Questionnaire content
  • Some items were culturally difficult
  • Abstract questions
  • Notions of work and working
  • Questions dealing with social interactions and
    ties
  • Question on sexual violence
  • Recall problems age, year/month of events,
    number of repeated events
  • Underreporting income, help from/to others,
    cooperation

17
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18
Community survey
  • Collected by supervisors from ????????? or
    secretary
  • General demographic characteristics
  • Economic characteristics
  • Living conditions and services
  • Assessment of labor out-migration

19
Survey data processing
  • CSPro software
  • Designed by the US Census Bureau and Micro
    International
  • Widely used for survey data processing (including
    in Armenia)
  • Convenient interface, supports Armenian fonts
  • Elaborate system of filters and checks
  • Available free of charge on the Internet
  • Regularly updated
  • On-line technical support is free and efficient
  • Double-entry to ensure quality

20
Qualitative (in-depth) interviews
  • 27 women married to migrants in both marzes (two
    villages in Tavush and one in Ararat)
  • The interview guide followed the themes and
    topics of the survey but explored them in greater
    depth
  • Most interviews were tape-recorded and
    transcribed verbatim

21
Qualitative (in-depth) interviews (cont.)
  • Interview guide to complement and expand on the
    survey
  • Main themes
  • Marriage
  • Children
  • Work
  • Religion
  • Social networks

22
Qualitative (in-depth) interviews Challenges and
solutions
  • Content issue
  • Women tend to answer yes and no
  • Women want to please the interviewers
  • Women were afraid of tape-recording of interviews
  • Second visit
  • Cultural differences
  • Building rapport with respondents

23
Data analysis survey
  • Descriptive and bivariate explorations
  • Migrants vs. Non-Migrants comparisonMigrants
  • Definitions of migrants
  • Husband was in migration 3 months or more, or
  • Husband is current migrant or return less than a
    month ago
  • Ararat vs. Tavush comparison
  • Separate analyses for migrants only
  • Multivariate analysesto establish net effect of
    husbands migration on outcomes of interest OLS
    regression, Poisson regression, and logistic
    regression
  • Analyses are done using SPSS and SAS

24
Data analysis survey (cont.)
  • Demographics
  • Economic conditions
  • Health
  • Reproduction
  • Social ties
  • Migration attitudes and prospects
  • Decision-making and gender attitudes

25
Migrants vs. non-Migrants Demographics
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Womans age (mean) 36.6 33.0
  • Age difference (husband-wife) 4.4 4.6
  • Age at first marriage (mean) 19.7 20.0
  • Officially registered marriage () 93.1 85.0
  • Womans educational level ()
  • Incomplete secondary 5.3 7.3
  • Complete secondary 42.2 47.4
  • Secondary special 44.2 35.6
  • Incomplete or complete higher 8.3 9.8
  • Educational differences husb-wife ()
  • Wife more educated 26.4 30.4
  • Equally educated 51.4 45.0
  • Husband more educated 22.1 24.6

26
Migrants vs. non-Migrants Demographics
27
Income and economic activities
  • Migrant Non-migrant
  • HH total income (D/month) (mean) 78200 55200
  • In Ararat 89500 66200
  • In Tavush 58800 46200
  • HH income per head (mean) 14900 10200
  • In Ararat 17200 12600
  • In Tavush 11200 8230
  • Woman works for income () 14.7 16.6
  • Womans monthly earnings (mean) 28500 24000
  • (n152)
  • Took loan from a bank() 26.1 22.4

28
HH material characteristics
  • Migrant Non-migrant
  • Rooms used for sleeping (mean) 2.4 2.3
  • Residents per room (mean) 2.7 2.7
  • Household owns a car () 28.5 41.4
  • HH owns a refrigerator () 74.4 74.9
  • HH owns a color TV () 87.4 78.1
  • HH owns a video or DVD () 46.8 33.7
  • HH owns gas or elect. stove () 76.2 69.6
  • Woman owns a cell phone () 18.7 9.6
  • Woman ate meat in past wk () 50.0 56.3

29
Agricultural possessions
  • Migrant Non-migrant
  • Household owns agr. land () 90.8 87.8
  • Size of own land, in ha (mean) .54 .74
  • Household rents agr. land () 10.4 13.9
  • HH sells/exchanges produce () 36.9 39.0
  • Household owns cows () 29.9 38.4

30
Perceptions of economic conditions
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Perceived HH wealth relative to
  • most HH in village ()
  • Most other are wealthier 23.2 21.4
  • Most other are poorer 15.7 17.0
  • Most are about the same 61.2 61.6
  • HH econ. conditions will improve
  • in a year () 45.0 37.5

31
Migrants vs. Non-migrants Health
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Assessment of own health
  • Good 16.0 23.2
  • Average 58.9 58.4
  • Bad 25.1 18.4
  • Has a serious health problem or
  • disability () 47.8 39.6
  • Health worsened in past yr () 41.7 35.4
  • Was sick in bed at least once in
  • past year () 54.3 43.4
  • Had to see doctor in past yr () 35.1 33.0
  • Youngest child was sick in past 44.6 45.7
  • 3 months

32
Migrants vs. non-Migrants Reproduction
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Number of children
  • ever born (mean) 2.7 2.3
  • Explained by differences in age
  • Wants to have more children () 14.5 25.9
  • Explained by differences in age and number of
    children
  • Husband wants more children () 32.0 40.3
  • Largely explained by differences in age and
    number of children
  • Currently uses family planning () 18.4 47.8

33
Migrants vs. non-Migrants Social Capital
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Knows half or more villagers
  • by name () 50.0 53.7
  • Has own relatives in village () 51.3 57.0
  • Has in-laws in village () 83.8 87.0
  • Visited in-laws in past week () 60.1 56.8
  • Visited non-relatives in past wk ()
  • Never 22.5 30.8
  • 1-2 times 34.1 30.1
  • 3 or more times 43.4 38.4
  • Attended one or more weddings
  • in village in past year () 66.4 72.3
  • Attended one or more funerals
  • in village in past year () 66.7 58.2

34
Migrants vs. non-Migrants Social Capital
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Socialized w/others last Wed. () 79.6 74.0
  • Socialized w/others last Sun. () 78.2 75.9
  • Cooperated with other women in past 3 months ()
  • In agricultural work 17.7 16.2
  • In buying and selling 8.1 6.7
  • Making preserves for winter 29.0 26.7
  • In any type of cooperation 41.2 36.5
  • Participated in community
  • projects () 11.1 10.7

35
Migrants vs. non-Migrants Social Capital
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Got money from relatives as
  • Interest-free loan 8.6 10.4
  • Loan with interest 4.0 4.4
  • Gift 13.4 11.7
  • Got money from in-laws as
  • Interest-free loan 11.1 13.4
  • Loan with interest 4.1 3.6
  • Gift 8.1 11.0
  • Got money from others as
  • Interest-free loan 10.4 15.4
  • Loan with interest 9.6 7.5
  • Gift 2.5 3.7

36
Migration intentions and expectations
  • Migrant Non-Migrant
  • Would like to move from
  • village () 59.5 53.5
  • Would like to move abroad () 7.6 5.6
  • Husband will likely to work away 54.8 18.0
  • She is likely to go with husband 30.0 53.1
  • ( of those whose husbands
  • are likely to go)
  • Watched Russian-language TV
  • in past week 66.7 58.4

37
Decision-making and gender attitudes
  • Migrant Non-migrant
  • Respondent is head of HH 11.8 3.3
  • Who made the decision on a major purchase
  • Mainly respondent 34.4 12.9
  • Mainly husband 33.0 44.7
  • Respondent and husband 17.6 24.6
  • Others 15.0 17.8
  • Only those who reported having made a major
    purchase recently

38
Insights From Qualitative Interviews Marriage and
Family
  • Marital satisfaction
  • ØÝù ɳí Ýù, ãÝ³Û³Í íÇáõÙ Ýù, µ³Ûó ¹ É³í
    Ýù ²ÙáõëÇÝë áõñÇß ÏÝÇÏ, ñ˳
  • ãáõÝÇ, ³ëÝù, áõñÇßÝñÇ ÝÙ³Ý ËÉ µ³Ý ãϳ, ÙÝù
    ɳí Ýù
  • Changes in family responsibilities resulting from
    migration
  • Changes in relationships with husband
  • ºñµ ݳ íñ³¹³éÝáõÙ ÏÛ³ÝùÁ ß³ï ɳí, ³ßËáõÛÅ,
    µ³ñÓñ
  • ïñ³Ù³¹ñáõÃÛ³Ùµ,ÙÍ ááñáõÃÛ³Ùµ,³ÙÝ ÇÝã ³ñ¹Ý
    ³ß˳ñÑáõÙ áËíáõÙ
  • ,³ÙÝ ÇÝã ³ñóٳÝáõÙ, ÕóϳÝáõÙ, ɳí³ÝáõÙ
    ²ÝÏ³Ë ù½³ÝÇó
  • ³ÙÝ ³é³íáï ɳí ïñ³Ù³¹ñáõÃÛ³Ùµ ³ñÃݳÝáõÙ ë, ùá
    ÁÝï³ÝÇùÇ Ñï, ß³ï
  • ɳí, ³ñï³Ï³ñ ³ ÙÇ Ëáëùáí, µ³Ûó ñµ ÝáõÙ ³,
    å³ñ½ ³ ³ñ¹Ý.
  • Marital (in)fidelity
  • ¹³ ÙÇßï É Ñ³ÛñÇ Ùáï ÁݹÑáõÝí³Í ³, áí ãÇ
    ¹³í³³Ýáõ٠γñáñÁ ùá Ùáï
  • ³ÉÇë, ñËùǹ, ëÇÙ, ÙÇßï É ³Û¹åë ñÙÝù ã
    áñ åÇïÇ ÙÇ µ³Ý áËÝù

39
Marriage and Family (cont.)
  • Wifes perceptions of husbands life in migration
  • ѳ٠ÇÝùÁ ñËùÇó Ñéáõ ³ ÁÉÝáõÙ, íñçÁ
    Ù½³ÝÇó Ñéáõ ³ ÁÉÝáõÙ, Ç٠ѳٳñ ³íÉÇ ¹Åí³ñ ³
    ÆÝùÁ ÁݹÕ,³ëÝù åïù ³ Çñ³ ѳٳñ ³ß˳ïáõÙ ³, ѳÙ
    Çñ³Ý Éí³óù ³ ³ÝáõÙ, ѳ٠Çñ³Ý ³ß ³ áõÙ, µ³Ûó ¹
    ³íÉÇ Ñ³ñÙ³ñ ÏÉÇÝÇ ÇÝùÁ ëïÕ ÁÉÝÇ, ÇÝùÁ ³ÙÝ
    ÇñÇÏáõÝ ³ Çñ³ ïáõÝ
  • Communication with husband while he is away
  • ÆÝùÁ ÑÇÙݳϳÝáõÙ ËáëáõÙ ³ ñËùÇó, áñ ñËùÇë
    ɳí å³ÑÇ, ÍÝáÕ³óë ɳí å³ÑÇ, ѳñÇ àÝó ù áñÍñÁ
    ³ÝáõÙ, ³éáÕçáõÃÛáõݹ áÝó ³, ¹áõ ù½ ɳí ݳÛÇ, ë
    É ³ëáõÙ Ù, ûï³ñ ïÕÁ ¹áõ ë, ¹áõ ɳí ÉÇÝë
    ØÝù ëïÕ É³í Ýù, ù½ å³ÑÇ, ËݳÛÇ Â åñáµÉÙ ³
    ÉÇÝáõÙ, ³ëáõÙ Ù,ѳñóÝáõÙ Ù, ËáëáõÙ Ýù
  • Husbands migration and family decision-making
  • Çïë ÇÝã ë ³é³íÉáõÃÛáõÝñ ß³ï áõÝÙ, ÇÙ
    ³ÙáõëÇÝÁ ëÇñáÕ ³ÙáõëÇÝ ³, µ³Ûó Ùñ ѳÛñÇ Ùç
    ÁݹáõÝí³Í , áñ ïÕ³Ù³ñ¹Á åïù áñáßáõ٠ϳ۳óÝÇ,
    ïÕ³Ù³ñ¹Ý ³ É˳íáñÁ
  • Changes in relationships with kin and in-laws
  • ÆÝã áËíÇ (ÉéáõÃÛáõÝ), ÙdzÛÝ ÍÝáÕÝñë ³íÉÇ ß³ï
    Ý ³ÝѳÝëï³ÝáõÙ, ñµ ݳ ³ÛëïÕ ãÇ Â ã ³ÙÝ
    ÇÝã É ÝáõÛÝÝ ÙÝáõÙ â áã ÙÇ ááËáõÃÛáõÝ É
    ãϳ, ÝáõÛÝÝ ³, ÑÁÉÁ ÙÇ µ³Ý É É³í³ÝáõÙ ³
  • Womens migration intentions
  • ºÃ ÙdzݳÝù ñϳñ ÏÙݳÝù, à ë ÏáÕ ï³ñÇ Ý³Ù
    ÏÙݳ٠²ÙáõëÇÝë ãåÇïÇ ³, åïù ³ ³ ÇÝÓ ëïÕÇó
    ï³ÝÇ, ÙÝù ÁÝ¹Õ ØÇÝíá¹ÇÛáõÙ, ïáõÝ áõÝÝù

40
Childbearing and child-rasing
  • Children and stability of migrants families
  • ³Ûó, ÇïÙ ß³ïñÁ Ï³Ý áõñÇß ÁÝï³ÝÇù Ý ÁݹÕ
    ëïÕËáõÙ,ñ˳ ïÕ³Ù³ñ¹ Ý, ѳëϳÝáõÙ Ù, µ³Ûó
    áÝ ñ˳ ãåïù áõÝݳÝ, áõ ëïÕÇ Ù³ëÇÝ É
    ãÙáé³Ý³Ý ºñËùÇÝ å³ÑÝ, ûÝÝ, ÙÏ ÙÏ ³Ý,
    ïëÝÝ, ñËùÁ Ñáñ ϳñÇùÁ áõÝÝ , åÇïÇ ÑñÁ
    ¹³ëïÇñ³ÏÇ, áÝ ÙÇ ùÇã, ÇÝã áõ½áõÙ Ý ³ÝÝ ÙݳÏ
    ñËùÇÝ ãÃáÕÝÝ, ãÙáé³Ý³Ý ØÏ ÙÏ ³Ý ñËùÇ
    Ùáï
  • Childrens socialization
  • ܳ áÝó áñ ³ñëÇí ¹³ñÓ³Í ÉÇÝÇ, Ýñí³ÛÇÝ ³, ÇÝùÁ
    ß³ï ѳÝÇëï ñ˳ , ñµ ѳÛñÁ ³ëïÕ ³ ÉÇÝáõÙ,
    µ³Ûó ÇÝã ѳÛñÁÝáõÙ ³ ë ñË³Ý áÝó áñ ³ÙÝ ÇÝãÇó
    ß³ï ßáõï Ýñí³ÛݳÝáõÙ ³, à áÕáóáõÙ ÇÝã áñ ÙÏÁ
    Çñ³Ý ÏåÝáõÙ ³ Ñݳñ³íáñ ãÇ áñ ãËÇ, ß³ï ßáõï ³
    µéÝÏíáõÙ, ÇëÏ áñ ѳÛñÇÏÁ ³ÛëïÕ ³ Ýñ³ ÏáÕùÇó ïÕ
    ãÇ ÝáõÙ,Ýñ³Ý ÉëáõÙ ³ , µ³óÇ ³Û¹ Ñáñ
    ¹³ëïdzñ³ÏáõÃÛáõÝÁ ß³ï ³íÉÇ ß³ï ³ ³ÝÑñ³Åßï
    ïÕ³ÛÇÝ, ù³Ý ÙáñÁ
  • Children and work
  • ºñµ ³ÙáõëÇÝÝñÁ ëïÕ ãÝ, ß³ï ÁÝï³ÝÇùÝñáõÙ
    ÑáëÁ ÁÝÏ³Í ñ˳ÝñÇ áõëñÇÝ ÆëÏ ¹³, ³ëÝù
    Ã, Ýå³ëïáõÙ ñ˳ÝñÇ ãëáíáñÉáõÝ, Å³Ù³Ý³Ï ãÝ
    áõÝÝáõÙ, Çëϳåë Å³Ù³Ý³Ï ãÝ áõÝÝáõÙ Ùñ
    ñ˳ÝñÁ ¹³ë ëáíáñÉáõ, áñáíÑï ÙÇ ûñ, ³ëÝù,
    Ëáï ÑÝÓÉáõ Ý ÝáõÙ, ÙÇ ûñ ϳñïáßϳ ù³ËѳÝÉáõ
    ¾¹ µáÉáñ ïë³ÏÇ ÑáëñÁ ÍÝáÕÝñÇ Ñï ñ˳ÝñÝ Ý
    ³ÝáõÙ, ïÕ³Ù³ñ¹Ï³Ýó µ³ó³Ï³ÛáõÃÛ³Ý å³ï³éáí ³,
    ³é³çÇÝ ÑñÃÇÝ, ųٳݳÏÇó ßáõï ÙͳÝáõÙ Ý,
    Ù³ÝÏáõÃÛáõÝ ùÇã Ý ïëÝáõÙ, ³íÉÇ ß³ï áÕáó Ý
    ÁÝÏÝáõÙ.

41
Womens Work
  • Womens work outside the home any changes due to
    migration?
  • Husbands continuing control over wives work
    outside the home
  • ÐÇÙÝ³Ï³Ý áõÕÕáõÃÛáõÝÁ ¹åñáóÝ ³... ÇÝÓ ÃíáõÙ ³,
    à áõñÇß áñÍ ÉÇÝÇ ³ÙáõëÇÝë ãÇ Ñ³Ù³Ó³ÛÝíÇ
    ...ÇÝùÁ ÙÇßï ѳñÝóáõÙ ³, áõñ ë ÝáõÙ, áñ
    ųÙÇÝ ë ïáõÝ ³ÉÇë
  • ºñÇ ³ß˳ïÉÁ Çßï ³, áñ óñíë ÙÇ ù³ÝÇ Å³Ùáí
    ³éûñÛ³ áñÍñÇó
  • Womens work at home
  • Þ³ï ¹Åí³ñ ³åñáÕÝñ ϳÝ... ë ½áõÙ Ù ÏáÕùÇó,
    ß³ï- ß³ï Ý ã³ñã³ñíáõÙ, ã³ñã³ñ³ÝùÝñ ë ß³ï ãÙ
    ïëÉ
  • Women add husbands responsibilities to their own
  • Women seek help from relatives or hire help

42
Social Networks
  • Continuity and change in the relationships with
  • Relatives and in-laws
  • ºñµ ÇÝùÁ ëïÕ ³, µ³ñϳÙÝñÇ Ñï ³íÉÇ ß³ï Ù
    ßíáõÙ, Ùͳٳë³Ùµ ÇÝùÝ ³
  • ³é³ç³ñÏáõÙ, à ³ñÇ Ý³Ýù, µ³Ûó áñ ÇÝùÁ ëïÕ ãÇ
    ³ëáõÙ ë, ÙÇ ùÇã ùÇã ßíÙ, ÙÇ ùÇã å³ëÇí
  • å³ÑÙ
  • ëÇÙ, Ý Å³Ù³Ý³Ï ³íÉÇ ³½³ï ñÇ, ³ëÝù, áõ½áõÙ
    ë µ³ñϳÙÇ ïáõÝ ³ÛóÉë, Ý
  • Å³Ù³Ý³Ï ³íÉÇ ³½³ï ³, ÑÇÙ³ ã, áÝó áñ ãáõ½Ý³ë,
    áñ ÇÝùÁ ëïÕ ãÇ
  • Àݹѳϳé³ÏÁ, ³íÉÇ ³½³ï Ý, ïÕ³Ù³ñ¹áõ
    ÝñϳÛáõÃÛáõÝÁ ãϳ, ѳñ³ÝÝñÇ Ñï ßáõÙÁ
  • ³íÉÇ ³½³ï ³, ³Ýϳßϳݹ ³, ï³ÝÁ ëå³ëáÕ ãáõÝÇ,
    ËáëáÕ ãáõÝÇ, ٳݳí³Ý¹, áñ ÙÍÇ ïÕ ãÇ,
  • µ³Ûó ¹ áñ ïÕ³Ù³ñ¹Á ï³ÝÝ ³ ÁÉÝÁÙ, ïÕ³Ù³ñ¹áõó åÇïÇ
    ù³ßíÝ
  • Neighbors
  • ³ëÉÁ ³ëë ϳñáÕ ³ ÙÏÁ áõñ³Ë³Ý³, ÙÏÁ ïËñÇ,
    Ï³Ù É ë ÇÙ ëÏëáõñÇó ÇÝã-áñ ÙÏÇó
  • µáÕáùóÇ, ÇÝã åïù ³ ³ÝÇ, ÙÏÁ ÙÇ áõñÇß ïÕ ³ëÇ,
    ÙÏÁ ÙÇ áõñÇß ïÕ ³ñ¹Ý ³ëÏáëÝñÁ
  • ß³ï³ÝáõÙ ³
  • Friends
  • ÀÝÏñáõÑÇÝñ É áõÝÙ ¹åñáó³Ï³Ý ³Ûó Çñ³Ýó Ñï
    ÑÇÙ³ ß³ï ãÙ ßíáõÙ, áõß-áõß Ýù ßíáõÙ,
  • Ý É ÑÇÙݳϳÝáõÙ Ñé³Ëáëáí Æñ³Ýù É Ý ÑÇÙ³
    ³Ùáõëݳó³Í, Å³Ù³Ý³Ï ãáõÝÝ, ï³Ý

43
Religion and psychological issues
  • The meaning of faith and religion before and
    after husbands migration
  • Worries about husbands health and safety
  • Religion as a source of emotional support
  • гí³ïÁ ϳñáñ , áñáíÑï ñµ ïÕÝñë ÙÇ ùÇã
    ÝÕ ³ ÉÇÝáõÙ, ³ëáõÙ Ù í³Û ²ëïí³Í ç³Ý, ÃáÕ
    ³ÙáõëÇÝë ßáõï íñ³¹³éݳ
  • ÆÝãåë ñ˳ÛÇ Ñ³Ù³ñ Ù³ÛñÁ ï³ÝÁ ãÇ ÉÇÝáõÙ, ÇÝÓ
    ѳٳñ É ÇÝùÁ ï³ÝÁ ãÇ. ݳ ÇÙ ÙÇ³Ï Ñ³ñ³½³ïÁ
  • Psychological problems loneliness, sense of
    insecurity, uncertainty about the future,
    nerves
  • ܳÛÇ, í³ÉñdzݳÛÇ ¹ÕÇÝ Ïá³ÏÝñÁ ¹ñ³Í Ý ÝïÕ,
    ë ³ÙÝ Çßñ åÇïÇ ËÙÙ, áñ ùÝÙ, ÇëÏ áñ ÇÝùÁ
    ëïÕ ³ ÉÇÝáõÙ ¹ ¹ÕÇ Ù³ëÇÝ ãÙ É Ùï³ÍáõÙ

44
Future steps
  • Further analyses, including multivariate analyses
    of survey data
  • Cross-sectional survey data ? limited causal
    inferences
  • Data and results through the Internet
  • Based on results and lessons learned, designing
    and implementing a larger new study (pending
    funding)
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