“…While human beings share a common biological heritage, each person belongs to not one, but many ethnocultural groups and has a unique family and cultural heritage and genetic makeup-all of which interact to shape development and the experience of trauma. One must exercise caution applying categorical delineations of ethnocultural variables (e.g., refugee, urban residence, ethnic group, primary language, socioeconomic status, nationality) because doing so runs the risk of obscuring significant differences within these larger groups (Loo et al, 2001;Marsella, Friedman, Gerrity, & Scurfield, 1996). In studying adaptation to complex trauma in ethnocultural context, one must start with the broad categories and then delve deeper into the subcategories that reflect group, community, family, and individual differences.…”