This article explains the need to improve research methods in studies
of how Third World refugees cope with resettlement in the First World.
Research on refugee adjustment (e. psychological and family dynamics)
and adaptation (e.g., sociocultural-economic measures) indicates that
these dependent variables are not unidimensional or homogeneous. Rath
er, adjustment and adaptation may have several components which each r
equire unique sets of causal variables and contributory factors to be
identified. Subjective aspects of adjustment and adaptation are import
ant and can sometimes have opposite effects on objective measures of a
djustment and adaptation. Conflicting findings in the literature sugge
st interaction effects among predictor variables, which are thus not '
'independent'' variables.