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Cover image for The Social Ecology of Resilience : A Handbook of Theory and Practice
Title:
The Social Ecology of Resilience : A Handbook of Theory and Practice
Physical Description:
xv, 463 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
ISBN:
9781461480921
Abstract:
he dominant view of resilience is as something individuals possess rather than as a process that can be facilitated. This book provides evidence for the ecological understanding of resilience in ways that help resolve both definition and measurement problems
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Item Category 1
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30000010369904 BF698.35.R47 S63 2012 Open Access Book Research Vote
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Summary

Summary

More than two decades after Michael Rutter (1987) published his summary of protective processes associated with resilience, researchers continue to report definitional ambiguity in how to define and operationalize positive development under adversity. The problem has been partially the result of a dominant view of resilience as something individuals have, rather than as a process that families, schools,communities and governments facilitate. Because resilience is related to the presence of social risk factors, there is a need for an ecological interpretation of the construct that acknowledges the importance of people's interactions with their environments. The Social Ecology of Resilience provides evidence for this ecological understanding of resilience in ways that help to resolve both definition and measurement problems.


Author Notes

Michael Ungar, Ph.D. is the author of 9 books and more than 70 articles and book chapters. His works include The We Generation:Raising Socially Responsible Kids, Too Safe for Their Own Good: How Risk and Responsibility Help Teens Thrive, Counseling in Challenging Contexts,and Strengths-based Counseling with At-risk Youth. He has practiced for over 25 years as a Social Worker and Marriage and Family Therapist with children and families in child welfare, mental health, educational and correctional settings. Now a University Research Professor, and Professor at the School of Social Work, at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada, he leads an international team of resilience researchers that spans more than a dozen countries on six continents. In addition to his research and writing interests, Dr. Ungar maintains a small family therapy practice for troubled children, youth and their families.


Table of Contents

I Introduction to the Theory
Social Ecologies and their Contribution to Resilience
Resilience: Causal Pathways and Social Ecology
Theory and Measurement of Resilience: Views from Development
Resilience and Children's Work in Brazil: Lesson from Physics for Psychology
II Five Interviews
An Interview with Macalane Malindi: The Impact of Education and Changing Social Policy on Resilience During Apartheid and Post-Apartheid in South Africa
An Interview with Bill Strickland: How Community-based Adult Educational Facilities can Lift People out of Poverty in Urban America
An Interview with Jude Simpson: Growing Beyond a Life of Abuse and Gang Involvement in New Zealand
An Interview with Vicki Durrant: Creating a Community Program for High-Risk Aboriginal Youth in Canada's North
An Interview with Arn Chorn-Pond: Helping Children in Cambodia Through the Revival of Traditional Music and Art
III The Individual (in context)
From Neurons to Social Context: Restoring Resilience as a Capacity for Good Survival
Situating Resilience in Developmental Context
Temporal and Contextual Dimensions to Individual Positive Development: A Developmental-Contextual Systems Model of Resilience
Girls' Violence: Criminality or Resilience?
IV The Family
Facilitating Family Resilience: Relational Resources for Positive Youth Development in Conditions of Adversity
Contexts of Vulnerability and Resilience: Childhood Maltreatment, Cognitive Functioning and Close Relationships
Averting Child Maltreatment: Individual, Economic, Social and Community Resources that Promote Resilient Parenting
Caring Relationships: How to Promote Resilience in Challenging Times
Young People, Their Families and Social Supports: Understanding Resilience with Complexity Theory
V The School
Local Resources and Distal Decisions: The Political Ecology of Resilience
Caring Teachers: Teacher-youth Transactions to Promote Resilience
Children with Disabilities and Supportive School Ecologies
Resilience in Schools and Curriculum Design
VI The Community
How Prior Social Ecologies Shape Family Resilience Amongst Refugees in U.S.Resettlement
Young People, Sexual Orientation, and Resilience
Community Resilience: Fostering Recovery, Sustainability, and Growth
The Social Ecology of Resilience in War-Affected Youth: A Longitudinal Study from Sierra Leone
Traveling Through Social Support and Youth Civic Action on a Journey Towards Resilience
VII Culture
Understanding Culture and Resilience: The Production of Hope
Case Study: Promoting Community Resilience with Local Values Greenland's Paamiut Asasara
Toward an Ecology of Stories: Indigenous Perspectives on Resilience
Macro, Meso and Micro Perspectives of Resilience During and After Exposure to War
Predictors of resilient psychosocial functioning in Western Australian Aboriginal Young People Exposed to High Family-level Risk
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