Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future Directions

Disasters pose a significant threat to the long-term well-being of individuals, communities and societies. Therefore, studying resilience, defined as the process of maintaining and recovering psychological well-being after adversity, is crucial for disaster preparedness and mitigation. The aims of t...

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Main Author: Helena Bakić
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Rijeka 2019-12-01
Series:Psychological Topics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pt.ffri.hr/pt/article/view/502
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spelling doaj-f2c224ad005b46d7a37a10629df892cd2021-05-20T12:39:19ZengUniversity of RijekaPsychological Topics1332-07422019-12-01283Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future DirectionsHelena Bakić0University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Department of Psychology, ZagrebDisasters pose a significant threat to the long-term well-being of individuals, communities and societies. Therefore, studying resilience, defined as the process of maintaining and recovering psychological well-being after adversity, is crucial for disaster preparedness and mitigation. The aims of this paper are to summarize the historical context of resilience research, present the key concepts, discuss current measurement approaches and propose future research directions. Key determinants of resilience - risk, positive adaptation and resources - are discussed with the focus on studies of adults affected by disasters. This narrative review demonstrates that research up to date has focused mostly on finding the individual characteristics that predict the absence of psychopathology or mental health disorder symptoms, while other types of resources or dynamic relations between key aspects of resilience have been neglected. Future studies should aim to include multiple measurement points, high- and low-risk groups, long-term follow-up and broader perspectives on both psychological well-being and potential resources.https://pt.ffri.hr/pt/article/view/502resiliencedisasterspositive adaptationresources
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helena Bakić
spellingShingle Helena Bakić
Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future Directions
Psychological Topics
resilience
disasters
positive adaptation
resources
author_facet Helena Bakić
author_sort Helena Bakić
title Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future Directions
title_short Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future Directions
title_full Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future Directions
title_fullStr Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future Directions
title_full_unstemmed Resilience and Disaster Research: Definitions, Measurement, and Future Directions
title_sort resilience and disaster research: definitions, measurement, and future directions
publisher University of Rijeka
series Psychological Topics
issn 1332-0742
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Disasters pose a significant threat to the long-term well-being of individuals, communities and societies. Therefore, studying resilience, defined as the process of maintaining and recovering psychological well-being after adversity, is crucial for disaster preparedness and mitigation. The aims of this paper are to summarize the historical context of resilience research, present the key concepts, discuss current measurement approaches and propose future research directions. Key determinants of resilience - risk, positive adaptation and resources - are discussed with the focus on studies of adults affected by disasters. This narrative review demonstrates that research up to date has focused mostly on finding the individual characteristics that predict the absence of psychopathology or mental health disorder symptoms, while other types of resources or dynamic relations between key aspects of resilience have been neglected. Future studies should aim to include multiple measurement points, high- and low-risk groups, long-term follow-up and broader perspectives on both psychological well-being and potential resources.
topic resilience
disasters
positive adaptation
resources
url https://pt.ffri.hr/pt/article/view/502
work_keys_str_mv AT helenabakic resilienceanddisasterresearchdefinitionsmeasurementandfuturedirections
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