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Publication | Open Access

Resilience definitions, theory, and challenges: interdisciplinary perspectives

2.5K

Citations

43

References

2014

Year

TLDR

The paper addresses key questions in resilience research, including how to define resilience, identify its determinants, leverage new technologies, and determine effective enhancement strategies. The authors advocate a multi‑level empirical approach that integrates genetic, epigenetic, developmental, demographic, cultural, economic, and social factors to study and foster resilience across individuals, families, communities, and cultures. Panelists agreed that resilience is a complex, context‑dependent construct defined by healthy, adaptive, or integrated positive functioning over time following adversity.

Abstract

In this paper, inspired by the plenary panel at the 2013 meeting of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Dr. Steven Southwick (chair) and multidisciplinary panelists Drs. George Bonanno, Ann Masten, Catherine Panter-Brick, and Rachel Yehuda tackle some of the most pressing current questions in the field of resilience research including: (1) how do we define resilience, (2) what are the most important determinants of resilience, (3) how are new technologies informing the science of resilience, and (4) what are the most effective ways to enhance resilience? These multidisciplinary experts provide insight into these difficult questions, and although each of the panelists had a slightly different definition of resilience, most of the proposed definitions included a concept of healthy, adaptive, or integrated positive functioning over the passage of time in the aftermath of adversity. The panelists agreed that resilience is a complex construct and it may be defined differently in the context of individuals, families, organizations, societies, and cultures. With regard to the determinants of resilience, there was a consensus that the empirical study of this construct needs to be approached from a multiple level of analysis perspective that includes genetic, epigenetic, developmental, demographic, cultural, economic, and social variables. The empirical study of determinates of resilience will inform efforts made at fostering resilience, with the recognition that resilience may be enhanced on numerous levels (e.g., individual, family, community, culture).

References

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