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Credit, Identity, and Resilience in the Bahamas and BarbadosStoffle, Brent W., Purcell,Trevor, Stoffle, Richard W, Van Vlack, Kathleen, Arnett, Kendra, Minnis, Jessica 12 1900 (has links)
People of the Caribbean have maintained social networks that provide security in the face of human and natural perturbations. Rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs) constitute one such system, which probably came to much of the Caribbean with African people and persisted through slavery. As a foundation of creole economic systems throughout the Caribbean, ROSCAs are time-tested dimensions of traditional culture and a source of pride and identity. This analysis of the history and contemporary functions of ROSCAs in Barbados and the Bahamas is based on more than a thousand extensive and intensive first-person interviews and surveys. This article argues that ROSCAs continue, much as they did in the past, to provide critical human services, social stability, and a source of African-ancestor identity in these two nations. (Women’s power, rotating credit, Bahamas, Barbados).
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Early Onset Risk and Resilience Factors Associated With Conduct Problems in Young Children With and Without Comorbid Emotional DifficultiesMahoney, Emery Brianne January 2012 (has links)
Conduct problems are among the most prevalent psychiatric conditions identified in outpatient mental health centers (Frick 1998b; Kazdin, 1995; Loeber, Burke, Lahey, Waters, & Zera, 2000). Despite a long history of examining risk factors associated with conduct problems, many studies have focused exclusively on adolescent onset conduct problems and few studies have sought to examine relationships among risk factors across several domains. Furthermore, few studies have been conducted to examine protective factors thought to mitigate the risk for children who are thought to be at a high risk of manifesting conduct problems. By gaining an understanding of risk and protective factors associated with early onset conduct problems, clinicians can develop and appropriately target interventions to those children at a high risk of developing conduct problems as well as those who are already displaying symptoms associated with early onset conduct problems. The purpose of the present study was to identify factors associated with an increased risk of early onset conduct problems across several domains and to develop a statistical model describing the relationships among these latter domains and risk factors. Furthermore, the present research used these identified risk factors in order to study factors that may offer protective benefits to children who are at a high risk of developing conduct problems at a younger age. The data used in the present study were from the National Survey of Children's Health database which contained data collected in 2007. These data were analyzed using a confirmatory factor analysis approach and multi-group structural equation modeling techniques. The results showed that living in a poorer quality neighborhood, coming from a lower socioeconomic status, and having a mother who reported overall fair or poorer mental health were all risk factors associated with reported early onset conduct problems. Protective factors identified included having a higher quality parent-child relationship and not having a history of involvement in special education. The implications of these findings are discussed as are future directions for research.
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Mind over matter : Non-cognitive assessments for the selection of the Swedish voluntary soldier of peaceBäccman, Charlotte January 2015 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis was firstly, to investigate if the current selection system mirrors the task of international deployment and voluntariness. Secondly, to investigate if and how non-cognitive assessments of personality and resilience, individual aspects that seem underrepresented in the current selection system, may increment validity to the current selection system. Since 2012 the Swedish Armed Forces is an All-volunteer Force where young men and women voluntarily can apply for a military service. In contrast to conscription, military service today includes compulsory international deployments with different demands on the personnel’s range of possible abilities and skills as well as selection process—yet the current selection system may not sufficiently correspond to the changes. The thesis comprises four studies (Study I-IV) with relevant military samples, and aside from Study I, a validation of a short version personality questionnaire (PQ) being used in two of the subsequent studies, Study II-IV had a longitudinal design. Study II shows that the former selection system lacked prognostic value of soldiers’ performance during international deployment, and their ability to readjust at homecoming. Additionally, Study II shows that non-cognitive assessments can be used as predictors for readjustment. Study III indicates that international deployment does not need to be harmful for the psychological well-being and that good health seems to be a stable factor across time and situations. Thus, selection of “good health” and resilience may prove fruitful. Study IV suggests that high motivation to serve may have serious consequences for selection decisions and, in the long run, the recruits’ psychological well-being. In sum, this thesis suggests that the current selection system needs adaption to the task of repeated international deployments and to the voluntary applicant pool, and that non-cognitive assessment may increment validity. / Since the end of the Cold War the Swedish Armed Forces has undergone several changes regarding both task and personnel system. The task of national security does not only entail territorial defense but also international operations worldwide. In addition, the soldiers are no longer conscripts but young men and women who have volunteered to secure and uphold peace and democratic values. The purpose of this thesis was twofold: firstly, to investigate if the current selection system mirrors the recent refocus on international operations and voluntariness; secondly, to see if and how non-cognitive assessments of personality, health, and resilience increment validity to the current selection system in identifying individuals suitable for repeated international deployments. This work was guided by a series of tentative questions regarding both the selection system in particular, but also international deployments in general. The four papers in this thesis suggest that the current selection system need to be adapted to better correspond to repeated international deployments as well as to a voluntary applicant pool; and that non-cognitive assessments of personality, health, and resilience increment validity to the selection system.
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Small Fry in a Big Ocean: Change, Resilience and Crisis in the Shrimp Industry of the Mekong Delta of Việt NamMarks, Brian January 2010 (has links)
The development of shrimp aquaculture in the Mekong Delta of Viet Nam is implicated in several patterns of local and regional change. These change trajectories are the emergent properties of complex processes embedded in particular social and spatial contexts. While places have become more interconnected through the global shrimp trade, those interconnections have been highly uneven, distributing risks and rewards disproportionately and producing new forms of conflict and cooperation among participants in the production network.Land use and farming systems in the coastal delta have changed profoundly in recent years. While some areas have become effectively `locked in' to shrimp farming due to environmental changes initiated by salt-water aquaculture, others have remained more flexible, able to rotate rice and shrimp seasonally. Hydrologic conditions, water infrastructures, and farmer experience all contribute to the path-dependence of these change trajectories, but commodity prices exhibit the strongest influence on their direction. Price stabilization may contribute to making prices a sustaining, `slow' variable in system change, not a disruptive `fast' one, heightening overall resilience.The production network of Mekong Delta shrimp is articulated through a variety of socially embedded relationships. Most producers are linked with international markets through informal ties with input suppliers based on trust and shrimp buyers, a relationship marked by opportunism. Processors operate through long-term informal relations with importers based on quality and consistency. This variegated network of relationships means farmers bear the brunt of price shocks, but processors lack quality assurance and traceability. Efforts to link chain participants into closer affiliation must pay attention to these relationships' effects on commodity chain governance.The globalization of the shrimp industry brought about conflicts between producers in the Mekong and Mississippi Deltas. Feminist geographers have posited several responses to globalization, from `counter-topographies' to `diverse economies/resubjectivization.' Living in Viet Nam and working with shrimp producers, I attempted to use these approaches to articulate an internationalist and trans-regional politics. Interactions with people there primarily resubjectivized me and reinforced national-scaled spatial imaginaries, however. Nevertheless, being `Uncle America' offered an insightful perspective into how some Vietnamese understood themselves and Viet Nam's tortured relationship with the U.S.
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The Beads of Courage Program for Children Coping with CancerBaruch, Jean Margo January 2010 (has links)
Interventions which ameliorate the late effects of cancer treatment, and promote adjustment for children coping with cancer are needed (Kazak, 2005). The Beads of Courage® (BOC) Program (Baruch, 2002), is an arts-in-health program developed to strengthen resilience and alleviate suffering in children receiving treatment for cancer. Through the BOC Program, children receive different colored beads that serve as visible symbols of the many procedures they experience during cancer treatment. Despite the wide use of the BOC Program by more than 70 children's hospitals, the BOC Program has never been formally evaluated.The purpose of this study was to evaluate the BOC Program using qualitative descriptive methods. The specific aims of the program evaluation were to: 1) Describe the BOC Program process; 2) Describe how the BOC Program is implemented; and 3) Describe the potential outcomes of the BOC Program.Data collection methods with four BOC Program stakeholders included: Semi-structured interviews with children (N=6); focus groups with clinicians (N=10) and parents (N=5); and open-ended surveys with clinicians (N=9), parents (N=8) and bead artists (N=6). Findings indicate that the BOC Program is operating according to design (process and implementation), and the overall satisfaction and perceived worth of the BOC Program is high. Emerging categories from the content analysis describe the BOC Program as a form of narrative medicine that provides a reflective tool, a symbol of accomplishment, and joy and encouragement for children receiving treatment for cancer. Preliminary data support the BOC Program theory, with resilience-based protective factors (positive coping, derived meaning, social support) supported, and risk factors (uncertainty in illness, defensive coping) decreased in children who received the BOC Program. Future studies should include quantitative measures of factors of resilience to determine change over time in children receiving the BOC Program during cancer treatment. Findings from this study support theory development to further strengthen the body of knowledge on psychosocial adjustment issues for children coping with cancer. The findings also provide evidence to support the role that arts-in-health programs have in alleviating the experience of suffering in children coping with cancer.
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Rewriting resilience: a critical discourse analysis of childhood resilience and the politics of teaching resilience to "kids at risk"Martineau, Sheila 05 1900 (has links)
This study is a critical analysis of the discourse on childhood resilience and the
politics of teaching resilience to "kids at risk" in inner-city schools. Resiliency research is
rooted in the early psychology studies of children's coping and competence. By the 1970s,
researchers were observing children who appeared invulnerable to traumatic events. These children
were later described as resilient, and resilience was defined as bouncing back from adversity. Today,
resilience has become an ideological code for social conformity and academic achievement. My
analysis problematizes "childhood resilience" and "teaching resilience" and examines two dangerous
shifts in the mainstream resiliency research over the past several decades.
In one shift, resilience slipped from an anomaly in the context of complex trauma to being claimed
as the social norm of the dominant society. In another shift, the context of resiliency research slipped
from traumatized to disadvantaged populations. Consequently, teaching resilience in inner-city
schools is a popular topic among professional child and youth advocates in BC. But these two shifts
manifest as teaching socioeconomically disadvantaged children to conform to the social norms of
the dominant society and as rationalizing social and educational programs that help children and
youth at risk overcome obstacles. Such programs do not work to challenge systemic inequalities.
I undertook a discourse analysis and an interpretive inquiry in identifying three resiliency discourses:
the first is a dominant expert discourse based on quantitative studies; the second is a subordinate
experiential discourse based on qualitative stories; and the third is a professional advocacy discourse
that includes expert and experiential knowledge. The expert discourse derives from psychometric
studies of resilient-identified children, and the experiential discourse emanates from the
psychotherapeutic narratives of resilient-identified adults. The advocacy discourse emerges from
educators, psychologists, and social workers who advocate on behalf of children and youth at risk.
The data include resiliency texts, focused interviews, and relevant fieldnotes. I developed criteria
for critiquing and recognizing resilience, explored potential intersections between the expert and
experiential discourses, and interpreted risk and resiliency themes in the advocacy discourse. In
challenging the dominant discourse, I argue that resilience is not a fixed set of traits that can be
reified and replicated. Moreover, I argue that complex trauma and trauma recovery are essential to
any construct of resilience and that resilience is pluralistic, contingent, and always in process.
My study recommends collaborative resiliency research that focuses on trauma and that values
experiential knowledge and attends to class and cultural diversity. It also recommends that the
professional advocacy community re-focus on risk and work toward developing social programs and
critical pedagogies that challenge structural oppression and systemic discrimination.
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RESILIENCE AND ATTENTIONAL BIASES: WHAT YOU SEE MAY BE WHAT YOU GETValcheff, Danielle 17 March 2014 (has links)
Research suggests that, during stress, resilient individuals use positive emotion regulation
strategies and experience a greater number of positive emotions than those who are less resilient.
Therefore, differences could be expected in attentional biases towards emotional stimuli based
on resilience. The current study investigated attentional biases towards neutral, negative and
positive images in response to varying levels of resilence and mood induction conditions
(neutral, negative and positive). Sixty participants viewed a series of pre and post-mood
induction slides in order to measure attentional biases to emotional stimuli. The study provided
evidence for the presence of trait and state congruent attentional biases. More resilient
individuals demonstrated an initial bias towards positive stimuli and once emotion was aroused,
the bias was away from negative stimuli. Additionally, mood congruent attentional biases were
observed for participants induced into positive and negative mood states. Implications as they
apply to research and clinical practice are discussed.
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Coping by kinders uit egskeidingsgesinne / Jacquiline von WiellighVon Wielligh, Jacquiline January 2003 (has links)
This study forms a subsection of an inter-university research project regarding the
resilience of children in late middle childhood, in the South African context.
The purpose of the current study was to determine whether any differences exist between
the coping of children from intact and divorced families.
It appears that resilience and coping are important components of psychological wellbeing,
which can promote or inhibit psychological well-being. During recent years the
effect that divorce has on children has enjoyed considerable interest. Literature on the
main components of this study, namely divorce and coping, maintains that divorce is a
traumatic process, causing multiple stressors for parents as well as children. It is also
clear that children are usually capable of handling the negative aspects related to divorce,
provided that they enjoy a support network consisting of family members, peer groups
and teachers. Most of the research continues to indicate a basically negative influence of
the divorce experience and process. Secondly a review of stress and coping literature
was offered, with reference to the manifestations of such phenomena amongst children
from divorced families. The important role played by coping in the lives of children and
the manner in which it directly relates to their development, adaptation and psychological
well-being. Amongst children, coping serves as a protection factor against stressors, such
as divorce, for instance, and it contributes to resilience.
During the empirical study the study population consisted of children in their late middle
childhood (grades 4-7). The children were selected by means of a random availability
test out of various schools in the various South Atiican provinces, after which
participants were randomly selected by means of class lists. Despite the scope of the
research project, only the data pertaining to 653 children was of use in the current study,
following the practical problems experienced during the project and the fact that several
researches handled the processing of the data. For the purpose of the study under
discussion, data pertaining to 73 children from divorced families and 580 children from
intact families was used.
The study used the "Stress Response Scale" (SRS) as a measuring instrument, as well as
biographical questionnaire, in order to determine the number, gender and ages of the
children from intact and divorced families respectively. None of the subscales provided
any statistically significant results and no practically significant differences were
indicated in respect of coping between children from intact and divorced families.
Concluding the study, recommendations are made for further research in this field and
practical suggestions are given for the implementation of the findings that were anived
at. / Thesis (M.A. (Psychology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2004.
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Assessing the Resilience of Ontario’s Low Water Response Plan under a Changed Climate Scenario: An Ontario Case StudyDisch, Jenna January 2010 (has links)
Water is essential to sustaining aquatic environments and is also a resource upon which many human-sectors depend. During times of reduced supply, competition or conflict may arise regarding its distribution due to its importance to local economies and its life giving benefits. The Ontario Low Water Response (OLWR) Plan is designed to deal with how water might be allocated under situations of reduced supply. When forced with data from the Coupled Global Climate Model 1 (CGCM1), the Guelph All Weather Storm Event Runoff (GAWSER) hydrologic model projects scenarios of reduced flows for the Grand River watershed, an area within the Province of Ontario. A level III declaration, which marks the highest stage of water emergency has never before been declared in the Province of Ontario, meaning there is uncertainty regarding how OLWR might operate. Using one scenario of climate change, this study explores the resiliency of the OLWR mechanism to operate under the demands of a changing climate and a growing population through interviews. Results show that the mechanism is not resilient enough to operate under conditions of reduced flow due to ambiguity in the mechanism and the tendency for humans to trump environmental uses of water, leading to detrimental effects on the fishery. Recommendations from this study suggest that ambiguities in the mechanism be revisited and clarified with a shift towards a proactive approach in order for environmental integrity to be upheld under scenarios of reduced flow.
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Assessing the Resilience of Ontario’s Low Water Response Plan under a Changed Climate Scenario: An Ontario Case StudyDisch, Jenna January 2010 (has links)
Water is essential to sustaining aquatic environments and is also a resource upon which many human-sectors depend. During times of reduced supply, competition or conflict may arise regarding its distribution due to its importance to local economies and its life giving benefits. The Ontario Low Water Response (OLWR) Plan is designed to deal with how water might be allocated under situations of reduced supply. When forced with data from the Coupled Global Climate Model 1 (CGCM1), the Guelph All Weather Storm Event Runoff (GAWSER) hydrologic model projects scenarios of reduced flows for the Grand River watershed, an area within the Province of Ontario. A level III declaration, which marks the highest stage of water emergency has never before been declared in the Province of Ontario, meaning there is uncertainty regarding how OLWR might operate. Using one scenario of climate change, this study explores the resiliency of the OLWR mechanism to operate under the demands of a changing climate and a growing population through interviews. Results show that the mechanism is not resilient enough to operate under conditions of reduced flow due to ambiguity in the mechanism and the tendency for humans to trump environmental uses of water, leading to detrimental effects on the fishery. Recommendations from this study suggest that ambiguities in the mechanism be revisited and clarified with a shift towards a proactive approach in order for environmental integrity to be upheld under scenarios of reduced flow.
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