Resilience, an Evolving Concept: A Review of Literature Relevant to Aboriginal Research.

Pimatisiwin Pub Date : 2008-01-01
John Fleming, Robert J Ledogar
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Abstract

Resilience has been most frequently defined as positive adaptation despite adversity. Over the past 40 years, resilience research has gone through several stages. From an initial focus on the invulnerable or invincible child, psychologists began to recognize that much of what seems to promote resilience originates outside of the individual. This led to a search for resilience factors at the individual, family, community - and, most recently, cultural - levels. In addition to the effects that community and culture have on resilience in individuals, there is growing interest in resilience as a feature of entire communities and cultural groups. Contemporary researchers have found that resilience factors vary in different risk contexts and this has contributed to the notion that resilience is a process. In order to characterize the resilience process in a particular context, it is necessary to identify and measure the risk involved and, in this regard, perceived discrimination and historical trauma are part of the context in many Aboriginal communities. Researchers also seek to understand how particular protective factors interact with risk factors and with other protective factors to support relative resistance. For this purpose they have developed resilience models of three main types: "compensatory," "protective," and "challenge" models. Two additional concepts are resilient reintegration, in which a confrontation with adversity leads individuals to a new level of growth, and the notion endorsed by some Aboriginal educators that resilience is an innate quality that needs only to be properly awakened.The review suggests five areas for future research with an emphasis on youth: 1) studies to improve understanding of what makes some Aboriginal youth respond positively to risk and adversity and others not; 2) case studies providing empirical confirmation of the theory of resilient reintegration among Aboriginal youth; 3) more comparative studies on the role of culture as a resource for resilience; 4) studies to improve understanding of how Aboriginal youth, especially urban youth, who do not live in self-governed communities with strong cultural continuity can be helped to become, or remain, resilient; and 5) greater involvement of Aboriginal researchers who can bring a nonlinear world view to resilience research.

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复原力,一个不断演变的概念:与原住民研究相关的文献综述。
抗逆力最常被定义为在逆境中的积极适应。在过去的 40 年里,复原力研究经历了几个阶段。心理学家从最初关注无坚不摧或战无不胜的儿童开始认识到,似乎促进复原力的大部分因素都源于个人之外。于是,人们开始从个人、家庭、社区以及最近的文化层面寻找抗逆力因素。除了社区和文化对个人复原力的影响之外,人们对作为整个社区和文化群体特征的复原力也越来越感兴趣。当代的研究人员发现,在不同的风险环境中,抗灾能力的因素各不相同,这就形成了抗灾能力是一个过程的概念。为了描述特定环境下复原力过程的特征,有必要确定和衡量所涉及的风险,在这方面,感知到的歧视和历史创伤是许多原住民社区环境的一部分。研究人员还试图了解特定的保护性因素如何与风险因素和其他保护性因素相互作用,以支持相对的抵抗力。为此,他们开发了三种主要类型的复原力模型:"补偿"、"保护 "和 "挑战 "模式。另外还有两个概念,一是抗逆性重新融入,即与逆境的对抗将个人引向一个新的成长水平;二是一些土著教育者认可的概念,即抗逆性是一种与生俱来的品质,只需适当唤醒。综述提出了今后以青年为重点的五个研究领域:1) 开展研究,进一步了解是什么使一些原住民青年积极应对风险和逆境,而另一些则不然;2) 开展案例研究,从经验上证实原住民青年重新融入社会的复原力理论;3) 就文化作为复原力资源的作用开展更多的比较研究;4) 开展研究,更好地了解如何帮助那些不生活在具有强大文化连续性的自治社区的原住民青 年,特别是城市青年,成为或保持抗逆力;以及 5) 原住民研究人员的更多参与,他们可以为抗逆力研究带来非线性的世界观。
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