NAVIGATING SETTLEMENT AND WELL-BEING: EXPERIENCES OF NEWCOMER WEST AFRICAN IMMIGRANTS IN ONTARIO

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Oga-Omenka, Charity

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University of Waterloo

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Background: Canada has become a popular destination for immigrants, with a significant proportion arriving through economic immigration pathways. Despite the growing population, African economic immigrants remain understudied and are often grouped with other immigrant subgroups whose experiences may differ significantly from theirs. Although many arrive with strong educational and professional qualifications, African newcomers frequently encounter structural barriers and cultural transitions that shape their well-being, settlement experiences, and help-seeking behaviours. Understanding these experiences is important in improving culturally centered support. Objective: This study examined how settlement stressors, cultural perspectives, and changes in sociocultural realities shape West African economic immigrants’ settlement experiences, understanding of well-being, and their engagement with support services in Ontario. Methodology: This study employed a qualitative research design using semi-structured, in-depth interviews with nine West African economic immigrants who had lived in Ontario for between nine months and four years. Data were analyzed sequentially using Braun and Clarke’s six-step thematic analysis. Interpretation was conducted inductively and informed by Ager and Strang’s Integration Framework and Berry’s Acculturative Stress Theory. Results: Inductive coding identified six themes that captured the participants’ settlement journeys, identity negotiations, and well-being experiences. These themes were organized into three overarching domains: (1) Starting Over, which described participants’ lives before immigrating, emotional transitions, and early settlement stressors; (2) Identity and Systems Navigation, which highlighted cultural adjustments, racialization, experiences of ‘sudden’ Blackness, employment barriers, and housing challenges; and (3) Resilience and Well-being, which reflected key coping strategies, including faith, community support, and cultural maintenance. Conclusion: The findings highlighted that well-being among West African economic immigrants is multidimensional and shaped by the interaction of cultural identity, settlement challenges, racialization, and structural inequities. Overall, greater attention is needed to center the experiences of economic immigrants to develop meaningful and culturally responsive approaches to settlement support and integration.

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