Introduction
Migration, be it voluntary or forced (escaping wars, conflicts, natural disasters and other emergencies), can have complicated consequences at the social and psychological levels of individuals concerned. After leaving the stability of home, country and culture, migrants are exiled into countries where they often feel alienated, isolated and struggle from discrimination and violations of their basic human rights.
Migration and asylum often involve traumatic experiences, including displacement, loss, violence, family separation, and uncertain futures. These experiences can lead to complex psychosocial challenges, particularly for vulnerable groups such as women, children, and unaccompanied minors. This advanced training course equips participants with knowledge and tools to understand, assess, and respond to the psychosocial consequences of forced migration and asylum processes.
As a practitioner, humanitarian worker, policy maker or researcher, it is vital to understand the psychosocial consequences of migration.The course emphasizes trauma-informed care, culturally sensitive interventions, and multi-sectoral coordination to address the mental health and psychosocial needs (MHPSS) of refugees, asylum seekers, and displaced populations. The course is based on a participatory, active learning approach, with an emphasis on peer-to-peer learning.
Participants who successfully complete the course will receive Certificate of Participation.
Course Objectives
By the end of the training, participants will be able to:
- Understand the psychological and social impact of migration and asylum-seeking processes.
- Analyze key stressors and resilience factors in migrant and refugee populations.
- Apply psychosocial assessment tools for displaced individuals and communities.
- Integrate trauma-informed and culturally competent approaches into care and support.
- Develop and manage MHPSS interventions in humanitarian settings.
- Identify strategies for cross-sector collaboration and referral systems.
- Advocate for the psychosocial rights and well-being of asylum seekers and refugees.
- Monitor and evaluate psychosocial support programs effectively.
Course Duration
This certificate course will take 10 days.
Who should Attend
The course is ideal for:
- Mental health professionals and psychologists
- Humanitarian aid and NGO workers
- Social workers and protection officers
- Migration officers and asylum policy experts
- Public health professionals
- Researchers and academics in migration and displacement
- Government and civil society actors in refugee-hosting countries
Course structure
Day 1: Introduction to Migration and Asylum
- Key definitions: Migrants, Refugees, IDPs, Stateless persons, Asylum seekers
- Global and regional trends in forced displacement
- Legal and policy frameworks: Geneva Convention, UNHCR, national asylum systems
- Drivers of migration: conflict, climate change, persecution, economic hardship
- Migration phases: Pre-departure, transit, arrival, settlement, return
- Differentiating voluntary vs. forced migration
- Institutional actors and coordination in migration response
Day 2: Psychosocial Impacts of Displacement
- Mental health vs. psychosocial well-being (MHPSS distinction)
- Trauma, grief, loss, and dislocation
- Impact of family separation and disrupted roles
- Effects on identity, belonging, and trust
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, somatization
- The role of uncertainty and legal limbo in asylum processes
- Community-level psychosocial breakdown and rebuilding
Day 3: Vulnerabilities and Resilience in Displaced Populations
- Vulnerable groups: women, children, persons with disabilities, LGBTQ+ individuals, elderly
- Exposure to violence, exploitation, and trafficking
- Child protection risks and coping mechanisms
- Gender-specific experiences of trauma and marginalization
- Social capital and resilience-building
- Role of community networks and traditional support systems
- Cultural and spiritual frameworks for healing
Day 4: Trauma-Informed and Culturally Sensitive Care
- Core principles of trauma-informed practice
- Understanding and responding to trauma triggers
- Avoiding re-traumatization in service delivery
- Working across cultural and religious differences
- Non-verbal trauma responses and interpretation
- Building safe spaces and trust with survivors
- Ethical and culturally respectful engagement practices
Day 5: Psychosocial Assessment and Case Management
- MHPSS needs assessment tools (IASC, WHO, UNHCR models)
- Interviewing techniques with vulnerable populations
- Identifying high-risk individuals (e.g., suicidal ideation, severe depression)
- Integrating MHPSS into broader case management systems
- Mapping support services and referral pathways
- Documentation, confidentiality, and follow-up
- Cross-sectoral coordination with protection, health, education sectors
Day 6: Mental Health and Community-Based Interventions
- Community-based MHPSS intervention models
- Psychological First Aid (PFA) and its adaptation for displacement contexts
- Establishing peer support and self-help groups
- Role of education, recreation, art, storytelling, and music in psychosocial healing
- Mobile clinics, safe spaces, and outreach strategies
- Integrating livelihood and psychosocial support
- Monitoring adverse events and supporting frontline staff
Day 7: Protection, Human Rights, and Legal Dimensions
- Rights of displaced persons under international law
- Ethical dilemmas in asylum processing and detention
- Human rights and the right to psychosocial support
- Working with survivors of torture, GBV, and trafficking
- Understanding legal aid and access to justice
- Data protection and informed consent in MHPSS programs
- Protection referral systems and reporting procedures
Day 8: Program Design and Implementation
- Elements of effective MHPSS programming in migration contexts
- Participatory planning with affected communities
- Mainstreaming MHPSS across sectors (health, education, protection)
- Use of digital tools in psychosocial programming
- Capacity-building for local staff and community facilitators
- Budgeting and resource mobilization for MHPSS
- Risk communication and stigma reduction campaigns
Day 9: Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning (MEL)
- Developing indicators for psychosocial well-being and impact
- Quantitative vs. qualitative M&E methods in MHPSS
- Use of outcome mapping, Most Significant Change, and participatory MEL
- Client feedback mechanisms and accountability to affected populations
- Learning loops and adaptive programming
- Using MEL data for advocacy and policy change
- Reporting tools and donor compliance in MHPSS programming
Day 10: Applied Simulation and Action Planning
- Group project: Design an integrated MHPSS intervention for a refugee settlement
- Scenario-based role plays: responding to distress signals
- Crisis simulation and coordination with multiple stakeholders
- Stakeholder mapping and response planning
- Presentation and peer review of group plans
- Final reflection: lessons learned and post-training application
- Closing, evaluation, and certificate awards
General Notes
- The instructor led trainings are delivered using a blended learning approach and comprises of presentations, guided sessions of practical exercise, web-based tutorials and group work. Our facilitators are seasoned industry experts with years of experience, working as professional and trainers in these fields.
- The participants should be reasonably proficient in English as all facilitation and course materials will be offered in English.
- Upon successful completion of this training, participants will be issued with a certificate.
- The training will be held at Kincaid Training Centre. The course fee covers the course tuition, training materials, two break refreshments and lunch.
- All participants will additionally cater for their, travel expenses, visa application, insurance, and other personal expenses.
- Accommodation and airport pickup are arranged upon request. For reservations contact the Training coordinator at Email: training@kincaiddevelopmentcenter.org or Tel: +254 724592901
- This training can also be customized to suit the needs of your institution upon request. You can have it delivered in our Kincaid Training Centre or at a convenient location.
For further inquiries, please contact us on Tel: +254 724592901 or send mail to training@kincaiddevelopmentcenter.org
Payments are due upon registration. Payment should be sent to our Bank account before commencement of training and proof of payment sent to training@kincaiddevelopmentcenter.org

