ABSTRACT

Psychological resilience has emerged as a highly significant area of research and practice in recent years, finding applications with a broad range of different groups in many settings. Contemporary discourse is not limited to ways of effective coping with adversity but also introduces mechanisms that can lead to enhanced capacity after dealing with difficult circumstances and recognises the importance of enriching the field with varied perspectives. The Routledge International Handbook of Psychosocial Resilience is a comprehensive compendium of writings of international contributors that takes stock of the state-of-the-art in resilience theory, research and practice.

The Routledge International Handbook of Psychosocial Resilience covers the many different trajectories that resilience research has taken in four parts. Part One delineates the ‘Conceptual Arena’ by providing an overview of the current state of theory and research, exploring biological, psychological, and socio-ecological perspectives and discussing various theoretical models of personal and social resilience. The ‘Psychosocial Correlates’ of resilience are discussed further in Part Two, from personal and personality correlates, socio-environmental factors and the contextual and cultural conditions conducive to resilient behaviour. In Part Three, ‘Applied Evidences’ are introduced in order to build upon the theoretical foundations in the form of several case studies drawn from varied contexts. Examples of resilient behaviour range from post-disaster scenarios to special operation groups, orphaned children, and violent extremism. Finally, Part Four, ‘Proposed Implications and Resilience Building’, sums up the issues involved in discussing post-traumatic growth, wellbeing and positive adaptation in the varied contexts of personal, familial, organizational and societal resilience.

The volume provides a comprehensive overview of resilience theory, practice and research across disciplines and cultures, from varied perspectives and different populations. It will be a key reference for psychiatrists, psychologists, psychotherapists and psychiatric social workers in practice and in training as well as researchers and students of psychology, sociology, human development, family studies and disaster management. 

section |87 pages

Conceptual arena

chapter |10 pages

Psychological resilience

A conceptual review of theory and research

chapter |11 pages

Resilience

An overall view in the Indian scenario

chapter |10 pages

Conceptual complexity of resilience

Synergy approach to measurement 1

section |98 pages

Psychosocial correlates

chapter |13 pages

Resilient personalities

An amalgamation of protective factors

chapter |14 pages

Spiritual intelligence

A core ability behind psychosocial resilience

section |125 pages

Applied evidence

chapter |12 pages

Medical and social models of orphanhood

Resilience of adopted children and adoptive families 1

chapter |16 pages

Spirituality and resilience

Explored pathways and unexplored territories

chapter |11 pages

Martyrdom as a result of psychosocial resilience

The case of Palestinian suicide terrorists

section |151 pages

Proposed implications and resilience building

chapter |10 pages

Posttraumatic growth

A pathway to resilience

chapter |12 pages

Spirituality, culture and resilience

A virtue-informed approach to well-being

chapter |12 pages

Family resilience

Positive psychology approach to healthy family functioning

chapter |11 pages

Building resilient organizations

Introspection through the lens of psychological resiliency

chapter |12 pages

Architects of our own survival

Can authorities empower individuals and communities by building resilience through self-reliance in the face of impending seasonal natural disasters?