According to the definition of the Refugee Convention, a refugee is 'someone who is unable or unwilling to return to their country of origin, owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion' (UN General Assembly, 1951). It is well established that refugees, including children, have high prevalence rates of mental health problems (Cayabyab, O'Reilly, Murphy, & O'Gorman, 2020). These include post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety and behavioural problems (Bronstein & Montgomery, 2011). Without intervention, these child mental health problems are likely to continue, especially when compounded by post-migration stressors (Tam, Houlihan, & Melendez-Torres, 2015). The majority of mental health studies have been carried out with children seeking asylum or being resettled in high-income countries (HIC-Fazel & Betancourt, 2018), despite the fact that the greatest proportion of refugees are resettled in low-and middle-income countries (LMIC-UNHCR, 2018). This particularly applies to the population influx from Syria in recent years (Javanbakht, Rosenberg, Haddad, & Arfken, 2018). Child mental health problems are associated with a range of risk factors pre-, during and post-migration (Reed, Fazel, Jones, Panter-Brick, & Stein, 2012). Whilst earlier research predominantly focused on the impact of war-induced trauma, hence research on trauma-reprocessing interventions, more recently, there has been increasing attention on post-migration risk factors whilst children settle into their host communities (Eruyar, Huemer, & Vostanis, 2017). These factors include poverty, parenting and family functioning, parental mental health, cultural and language barriers, peer relationships, school and community exclusion (Bronstein & Montgomery, 2011; Reed et al., 2012). Likewise in the general population, individual factors were also found to be important in explaining mental health problems of refugee children. Older age, being female, biological predisposition and maladaptive