id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-017334-u1brl2bi Annandale, Ellen Society, Differentiation and Globalisation 2017-07-21 .txt text/plain 8258 366 51 By turn, 'forced migrants' comprises refuges, defined under the United Nations (UN) Refugee Convention of 1951 as those forced to flee to save their life or preserve their freedom; asylum seekers, or people seeking international protection, awaiting a decision on whether they have refugee status; and internally displaced persons (IDPs) forced to leave their homes to avoid armed conflict, natural or human-made disasters, or violations of human rights, but who have not crossed an international border. Although we need to be wary of overgeneralising, where 'voluntary' movement is concerned, research points to health selection since migrants often are healthier compared to people in their country of origin, yet it is important to recognise that migration itself can carry risks such as those of transit and adjusting to life in a new country. The health consequences of forced migration are a powerful illustration of the 'social suffering [that] results from what political, economic, and institutional power does to people, and reciprocally, from how these forms of power themselves influence responses to social problems' (Kleinman et al. ./cache/cord-017334-u1brl2bi.txt ./txt/cord-017334-u1brl2bi.txt