TY - JOUR
T1 - Toward minority resilience – an integrated qualitative analysis with trans and gender non-conforming interviewees in Sri Lanka
AU - De Silva, Raneesha
AU - Henrich, Sören
AU - de Silva, B. G. Ransirini
AU - Maycock, Matthew
AU - Edirisooriya, Chithranga
AU - Nagahawatta, Kushlani
AU - Medawatta, Warsha
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Purpose: This study explored minority resilience of trans and gender non-confirming individuals within a non-Western, collectivist society in Sri Lanka. Design: Fifteen interviews were analyzed with the multi-method qualitative text and discourse analysis framework; by incorporating the depth of discourse analysis with the breadth of thematic analysis. Findings: Four narratives emerged (jealousy and competition; authentic expression; othered or shunned; and conditional acceptance), located at the convergence of the two interview foci, ‘group membership’ and ‘level of support’. Study findings strengthen the Transgender Resilience Intervention Model with evidence from a non-Western context, highlighting unique findings from Sri Lanka. Limitations: The sample size, focus on one nationality, exclusion of minors, and recruitment of participants with access to digital devices may limit generalizability of study findings. Some responses on autobiographical data required prompting by the researcher, and retrospective recollections may not be reliable. Originality: This research is one of the first studies in South Asia to explore minority resilience with TGNC individuals. The findings add to the growing body of South Asian scholarship and further expand the predominantly Global North literature by providing a collectivist perspective.
AB - Purpose: This study explored minority resilience of trans and gender non-confirming individuals within a non-Western, collectivist society in Sri Lanka. Design: Fifteen interviews were analyzed with the multi-method qualitative text and discourse analysis framework; by incorporating the depth of discourse analysis with the breadth of thematic analysis. Findings: Four narratives emerged (jealousy and competition; authentic expression; othered or shunned; and conditional acceptance), located at the convergence of the two interview foci, ‘group membership’ and ‘level of support’. Study findings strengthen the Transgender Resilience Intervention Model with evidence from a non-Western context, highlighting unique findings from Sri Lanka. Limitations: The sample size, focus on one nationality, exclusion of minors, and recruitment of participants with access to digital devices may limit generalizability of study findings. Some responses on autobiographical data required prompting by the researcher, and retrospective recollections may not be reliable. Originality: This research is one of the first studies in South Asia to explore minority resilience with TGNC individuals. The findings add to the growing body of South Asian scholarship and further expand the predominantly Global North literature by providing a collectivist perspective.
KW - Gender diverse
KW - Minority
KW - Power threat meaning framework
KW - Qualitative
KW - Resilience
KW - Sri Lanka
KW - Trans
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105001947369
U2 - 10.1108/MHSI-01-2025-0036
DO - 10.1108/MHSI-01-2025-0036
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105001947369
SN - 2042-8308
JO - Mental Health and Social Inclusion
JF - Mental Health and Social Inclusion
ER -