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Threats To Optimal Development - Integrating Biological, Psychological, and Social Risk Factors: the Minnesota Symposia on Child Psychology, Volume 27 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,494
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Threats To Optimal Development - Integrating Biological, Psychological, and Social Risk Factors: the Minnesota Symposia on Child Psychology, Volume 27 (Paperback)
Series: Minnesota Symposia on Child Psychology Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Psychology's recent immersion in risk research has introduced a new
variant in which the focus is not solely on disease, but also on
the effects and consequences produced by the multiple aspects of
risk on individual adaptation. Variations in such patterns of
adaptation signal the entrance of protective factors as an added
element to the clinical and research focus in the prediction of
positive versus negative outcomes under the duress of stressful
experiences. Given psychology's investment in the entire range of
human adaptation--embracing severe disorder at one extreme and
strong positive adaptations at the other--it is not surprising to
find this new element of compensatory protective factors as a
reshaping factor in the field of risk research. It is one that
recognizes and studies the relevance of risk influences on
disorder, but also focuses on recovery from disorder or the absence
of disorder despite the presence of risk. This latter element
implicates the notion of "resilience." It is this opening of the
field of risk research that seems to bear the heavy and welcome
imprint of psychology. Fundamental to the study of protective
factors in development, however, is a broad knowledge base focused
on risk factors that often contain the healthy development of
infants and children. This volume reflects a continuation of the
concerns of the Institute of Child Development with the nature and
content of development in multiple contexts. It comes at a most
welcome point since the Institute--in collaboration with the
University of Minnesota's Department of Psychology--now
participates in a jointly shared graduate training program in
clinical psychology which stimulates and supports the growth of a
newly emergent developmental psychopathology. For this field to
advance will require a broad perspective and acceptance of the
significance of the diversity of risk factors that extends
throughout the life span and results in developmental trajectories
that implicate various biological, psychological, and sociocultural
risk elements.
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