Refugees and asylum seekers are among the 65.3 million people currently forcibly displaced due to civil war, ethnic cleansing, genocide, and hunger (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, 2016). It is tragic that forced migration in such conditions often leads to further traumatic and chronic stress due to human trafficking and related forms of sexual or labor exploitation (Slobodin & de Jong, 2015; Steel et al., 2004). Consequently, forcibly displaced persons (FDPs) suffer at high rates of traumaand stress-related mental health problems. Yet, only a small proportion receives specialized and evidence-based mental health interventions (Carlsson, Sonne, & Silove, 2014; Collins et al., 2011). This global public mental health crisis is not only driven by a lack of resources and the complexity of providing treatment to FDPs worldwide, but made worse by a lack of essential experimental clinical research. Indeed, strong empirical understanding of risk processes and related mental health intervention targets is critical for the development of targeted, efficient, easily implemented, and effective interventions tailored to FDPs (Collins et al., 2011; Nickerson, Bryant, Silove, & Steel, 2011; Yuval, Zvielli, & Bernstein, 2016). Models of risk and maintenance factors of psychopathology and related mental health interventions for FDPs often rely largely or solely on research in WEIRD (Westerneducated industrialized rich democratic) populations