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E-grāmata: Handbook of Adult Resilience

3.75/5 (21 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (Arizona State University, United States), Edited by (Arizona State University, United States), Edited by (Arizona State University, United States)
  • Formāts: 540 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Jan-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Guilford Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781606234891
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  • Formāts: 540 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Jan-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Guilford Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781606234891

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What enables people to bounce back from stressful experiences? How do certain individuals maintain a sense of purpose and direction over the long term, even in the face of adversity? This is the first book to move beyond childhood and adolescence to explore resilience across the lifespan. Coverage ranges from genetic and physiological factors through personal, family, organizational, and community processes. Contributors examine how resilience contributes to health and well-being across the adult life cycle; why—and what happens when—resilience processes fail; ethnic and cultural dimensions of resilience; and ways to enhance adult resilience, including reviews of exemplary programs.

Recenzijas

Framed brilliantly, this book is the mother lode of scientific knowledge on a profoundly important topic. The editors recognize that understanding why some individuals prevail in the face of adversity--and even flourish--must encompass numerous influences, from personal qualities to social networks and communities. Importantly, the final section presents resilience-promoting interventions designed to build the strengths required to surmount major life difficulties. It will be the definitive source on adult resilience for years to come.--Carol D. Ryff, PhD, Director, Institute on Aging, and Professor of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Resilience is a psychological concept that has excited many investigators and practitioners, but it has been difficult to define clearly or measure reliably. This handbook gathers together the clearest thinkers in the field to tackle this idea from biological, emotional, cognitive, developmental, social, and even policy perspectives. There is no other book available with this kind of reach, and it should be on the shelf of anyone contemplating research on resilience or for whom the idea of resilience helps to organize clinical and community-based interventions. This volume includes a fabulous group of contributors writing at the cutting edge of the field.--Peter Salovey, PhD, Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology, Yale University

Scholars and students alike will find the Handbook of Adult Resilience to be invaluable. Simply stated, this is the most important book to date on the topic of resilience.--John T. Cacioppo, PhD, Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor and Director, Center for Cognitive and Social Neuroscience, University of Chicago

I have used the Handbook of Adult Resilience as the main text in my course on Psychological Resilience at Harvard for two years. Both graduate- and undergraduate-level students have found the text to be clear, informative, up-to-date, and interesting. I thank the editors for bringing together the best researchers in the field to provide a comprehensive overview of resilience in a single volume.--Shelley Carson, PhD, Lecturer, Department of Psychology, Harvard University

This text offers a balanced examination of resilience at multiple levels of psychological analysis. Students appreciate the direct, approachable writing and the comprehensive, current understanding of the topic. I rely heavily on this text in my teaching.--Jackson Rainer, PhD, ABPP, Director of Clinical Training and Professor of Psychology, Georgia Southern University

- The book's value lies in its evidence-based consideration of resilience across a range of domains and at many levels of analysis....The book is well organized, coherent, and accessible. Also, the concept of resilience travels well across subject boundaries, providing obvious linkages between seemingly disparate topics. The book's holistic approach fills a big gap in the literature and it should prove a valuable resource for students, researchers, practitioners, and policy makers with theoretical or applied interest in this fascinating and increasingly important topic. --The Psychologist, 4/4/2012 The coverage of topics is comprehensive, and the organization of the book is useful to the reader in that there is a logical sequence going from the individual (biologic) to the social....It covers a wide range of topics on resilience, including not only resilience of individuals but also of communities and neighborhoods, and even cities. It raises issues and future research concerns, and the chapters are well written, with fluidity and authority. Furthermore, whereas most of the literature on resilience so far has been on children, this is the first handbook to focus on resilience in individuals of adult age, which makes it an important addition to the literature....Highly recommended to a wide variety of individuals, from academic and practicing psychologists to social workers, physicians, stress researchers, sociologists, occupational therapists, community workers, and many others interested in understanding the development of healthy personas and in helping individuals coping with loss and adversity. --PsycCRITIQUES, 4/4/2012Provid[ es] readers with a thorough, thoughtful, and varied treatise of psychological resilience in adulthood....Laudably, the volume includes perspectives that run the gamut of the behavioral sciences, including biological, cognitive, behavioral, and social psychology, as well as applied sub-disciplines spanning organizational, cultural, and health contexts. Such heterogeneity is very much a strength of the present volume.The volume contains several freestanding allusions to intriguing research findings and insightful observations, which further enhance the readers experience.The volume represents a hugely valuable resource for researchers and policy-makers interested in notions of resilience and their applicability to real-life contexts. The editors have successfully captured the vibrancy and diversity of this research area, and have certainly laid convincing groundwork for a case to be made that resilience research represents a coherent and viable subdiscipline-in-waiting.--Journal of Positive Psychology, 3/1/2012 "Framed brilliantly, this book is the mother lode of scientific knowledge on a profoundly important topic. The editors recognize that understanding why some individuals prevail in the face of adversity--and even flourish--must encompass numerous influences, from personal qualities to social networks and communities. Importantly, the final section presents resilience-promoting interventions designed to build the strengths required to surmount major life difficulties. It will be the definitive source on adult resilience for years to come."--Carol D. Ryff, PhD, Director, Institute on Aging, and Professor of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison

"Resilience is a psychological concept that has excited many investigators and practitioners, but it has been difficult to define clearly or measure reliably. This handbook gathers together the clearest thinkers in the field to tackle this idea from biological, emotional, cognitive, developmental, social, and even policy perspectives. There is no other book available with this kind of reach, and it should be on the shelf of anyone contemplating research on resilience or for whom the idea of resilience helps to organize clinical and community-based interventions. This volume includes a fabulous group of contributors writing at the cutting edge of the field."--Peter Salovey, PhD, Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology, Yale University

"Scholars and students alike will find the Handbook of Adult Resilience to be invaluable. Simply stated, this is the most important book to date on the topic of resilience."--John T. Cacioppo, PhD, Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor and Director, Center for Cognitive and Social Neuroscience, University of Chicago - The book's value lies in its evidence-based consideration of resilience across a range of domains and at many levels of analysis....The book is well organized, coherent, and accessible. Also, the concept of resilience travels well across subject boundaries, providing obvious linkages between seemingly disparate topics. The book's holistic approach fills a big gap in the literature and it should prove a valuable resource for students, researchers, practitioners, and policy makers with theoretical or applied interest in this fascinating and increasingly important topic. --The Psychologist, 4/4/2012ĘĘ The coverage of topics is comprehensive, and the organization of the book is useful to the reader in that there is a logical sequence going from the individual (biologic) to the social....It covers a wide range of topics on resilience, including not only resilience of individuals but also of communities and neighborhoods, and even cities. It raises issues and future research concerns, and the chapters are well written, with fluidity and authority. Furthermore, whereas most of the literature on resilience so far has been on children, this is the first handbook to focus on resilience in individuals of adult age, which makes it an important addition to the literature....Highly recommended to a wide variety of individuals, from academic and practicing psychologists to social workers, physicians, stress researchers, sociologists, occupational therapists, community workers, and many others interested in understanding the development of healthy personas and in helping individuals coping with loss and adversity. --PsycCRITIQUES, 4/4/2012ĘĘ āProvid[ es] readers with a thorough, thoughtful, and varied treatise of psychological resilience in adulthood....Laudably, the volume includes perspectives that run the gamut of the behavioral sciences, including biological, cognitive, behavioral, and social psychology, as well as applied sub-disciplines spanning organizational, cultural, and health contexts. Such heterogeneity is very much a strength of the present volumeā¦.The volume contains several freestanding allusions to intriguing research findings and insightful observations, which further enhance the readersā experienceā¦.The volume represents a hugely valuable resource for researchers and policy-makers interested in notions of resilience and their applicability to real-life contexts. The editors have successfully captured the vibrancy and diversity of this research area, and have certainly laid convincing groundwork for a case to be made that resilience research represents a coherent and viable subdiscipline-in-waiting.ā--Journal of Positive Psychology, 3/1/2012

I RESILIENCE AT MANY LEVELS OF ANALYSIS
1 Resilience: A New Definition of Health for People and Communities
3(32)
Alex J. Zautra
John Stuart Hall
Kate E. Murray
II BASIC DIMENSIONS OF RESILIENCE
A Biological Dimensions of Resilience
2 Psychobiological Mechanisms of Resilience to Stress
35(20)
Adriana Feder
Eric J. Nestler
Maren Westphal
Dennis S. Charney
3 Genes and Environments: How They Work Together to Promote Resilience
55(26)
Kathryn Lemery-Chalfant
B Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Models of Resilience
4 Positive Emotions as a Basic Building Block of Resilience in Adulthood
81(13)
Anthony D. Ong
C. S. Bergeman
Sy-Miin Chow
5 Personal Intelligence and Resilience: Recovery in the Shadow of Broken Connections
94(18)
John D. Mayer
Michael A. Faber
6 The Resilient Personality
112(14)
Andrew E. Skodol
7 Resilience in Response to Loss
126(20)
Kathrin Boerner
Daniela Jopp
8 Psychopathology as Dysfunctional Self-Regulation: When Resilience Resources Are Compromised
146(25)
Paul Karoly
9 Self-Complexity: A Source of Resilience?
171(22)
Eshkol Rafaeli
Atara Hiller
10 Anchored by Faith: Religion as a Resilience Factor
193(20)
Kenneth I. Pargament
Jeremy Cummings
C Resilience across the Lifespan
11 Resilience over the Lifespan: Developmental Perspectives on Resistance, Recovery, and Transformation
213(25)
Ann S. Masten
Margaret O'Dougherty Wright
12 Early Adversity and Resilience in Emerging Adulthood
238(20)
Linda J. Luecken
Jenna L. Gress
13 Resilience to Potential Trauma: Toward a Lifespan Approach
258(25)
Anthony D. Mancini
George A. Bonanno
D Social Dimensions of Resilience
14 Resilience in Adolescence: Overcoming Neighborhood Disadvantage
283(26)
Marc A. Zimmerman
Allison B. Brenner
15 Social Support and Growth Following Adversity
309(24)
Vicki S. Helgeson
Lindsey Lopez
E Organizational and Public Policy Dimensions of Resilience
16 Building Organizational Resilience and Adaptive Management
333(17)
Janet Denhardt
Robert Denhardt
17 Indicators of Community Resilience: What Are They, Why Bother?
350(25)
John Stuart Hall
Alex J. Zautra
II ETHNIC AND CULTURAL DIMENSIONS OF RESILIENCE
18 Cultural Adaptation and Resilience: Controversies, Issues, and Emerging Models
375(29)
Felipe Gonzalez Castro
Kate E. Murray
19 Cultural Dimensions of Resilience among Adults
404(23)
Michael Ungar
IV INTERVENTIONS FOR ENHANCING RESILIENCE
20 The Emergence of Capacity-Building Programs and Models of Resilience
427(23)
Martha Kent
Mary C. Davis
21 Boosting Happiness, Buttressing Resilience: Results from Cognitive and Behavioral Interventions
450
Sonja Lyubomirsky
Matthew D. Della Porta
22 Positive Affect at the Onset of Chronic Illness: Planting the Seeds of Resilience
165(319)
Judith Tedlie Moskowitz
23 Asset-Based Strategies for Building Resilient Communities
484(12)
John P. Kretzmann
24 Health in a New Key: Fostering Resilience through Philanthropy
496(20)
Roger A. Hughes
Author Index 516(17)
Subject Index 533
John W. Reich, PhD, is Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Arizona State University (ASU). His work has focused on the application of social psychological concepts in understanding societal issues and the development of interventions for improving individuals' well-being. Dr. Reich and the other two coeditors are members of the ASU Resilience Solutions Group, which was the source of the development of this handbook. Alex J. Zautra, PhD, is Foundation Professor of Clinical Psychology at ASU. His research, clinical work, teaching, and publications explore fundamental mindbody issues such as the role of positive emotion in health and the sources of resilience within the person that restore health and well-being following challenges from stressors at home, at work, and in community life. Dr. Zautra's current research focuses on resilience to chronic pain and resilience as people age. John Stuart Hall, PhD, is Professor of Public Affairs and Public Service at ASU. A founder and former Director of ASU's School of Public Affairs and its Center for Urban Studies, and Project Director of over 40 large-scale funded and often interdisciplinary urban research projects, Dr. Hall has specialized in linking the University with pressing community public policy and governance issues. His current research interests include building resilience in communities and urban regions, and healthy aging.