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In this article we reflect on the relatively recent emphasis on P alestinian children's mental health and well‐being in the context of exposure to chronic warlike conditions, as we position this trend within the larger framework of the generations‐long history of political turmoil and suffering. We describe how a process that started with no attention to psychosocial health of children in relation to exposure to dispossession, expulsion, occupation, repression and military attacks, proceeded with a focus on presumed mental disorders, and the more recent approach of designing context appropriate and community‐based psychosocial interventions.
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Yoke Rabaia
Birzeit University
Mahasin F. Saleh
Doha Institute for Graduate Studies
Rita Giacaman
Birzeit University
Children & Society
Birzeit University
Bethlehem University
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Rabaia et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0aa5dee7a7b397ee7384ee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/chso.12061
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