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Developing Prosocial Communities Across Cultures

By: Tyler, Forrest B [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York, NY : Springer New York, 2007.Description: XII, 164 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780387714851.Subject(s): Psychology | Clinical psychology | Community psychology | Environmental psychology | Psychology | Community and Environmental Psychology | Clinical PsychologyDDC classification: 155.9 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Definitions and Background Issues -- Psychosocial Integration: The Theoretical Framework -- The Current Situation: Psychologists’ Approaches to Community Change -- The Prosocial Effect of Changing One Aspect of a Community -- The Prosocial Effect of Coordinating Change in Two Aspects of a Community -- A Guide for Establishing Prosocial Communities -- Questscope: A Comprehensive Prosocial Community Program.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Skillfully combining psychological knowledge and humanitarian wisdom, Developing Prosocial Communities across Cultures shows how nurturing environments can be rooted in the common concerns of people and institutions, while giving readers the steps toward achieving this goal. Psychologist/activist Forrest Tyler emphasizes individuals’ collective responsibilities—to themselves, each other, and society—and describes a coordinated balance of discrete social changes brought about by civic action, policy changes initiated by officials, and collaboration between professionals and the community. Instructive examples from locales as varied as Colombia, Jordan, and the United States offer models from which readers can form unique, innovative solutions. And the author’s multicultural/ multiethnic approach clearly maps out the road from theoretical concepts to real-world action: Defining the prosocial community—core characteristics and elemental relationships. Observing communities: assessing their potential for intervention, determining change objectives. Thinking beyond traditional psychological/mental health approaches to community change. Prosocial effects of community projects involving multiple levels of action. Questscope: an extended example of community change in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Tyler’s decades of experience, and the lucid perspective of Developing Prosocial Communities across Cultures, brings social and community psychologists new assurance that social programs can have greater relevance to the people and groups they serve.
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Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E books E books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur
Available EBK1338
Total holds: 0

Definitions and Background Issues -- Psychosocial Integration: The Theoretical Framework -- The Current Situation: Psychologists’ Approaches to Community Change -- The Prosocial Effect of Changing One Aspect of a Community -- The Prosocial Effect of Coordinating Change in Two Aspects of a Community -- A Guide for Establishing Prosocial Communities -- Questscope: A Comprehensive Prosocial Community Program.

Skillfully combining psychological knowledge and humanitarian wisdom, Developing Prosocial Communities across Cultures shows how nurturing environments can be rooted in the common concerns of people and institutions, while giving readers the steps toward achieving this goal. Psychologist/activist Forrest Tyler emphasizes individuals’ collective responsibilities—to themselves, each other, and society—and describes a coordinated balance of discrete social changes brought about by civic action, policy changes initiated by officials, and collaboration between professionals and the community. Instructive examples from locales as varied as Colombia, Jordan, and the United States offer models from which readers can form unique, innovative solutions. And the author’s multicultural/ multiethnic approach clearly maps out the road from theoretical concepts to real-world action: Defining the prosocial community—core characteristics and elemental relationships. Observing communities: assessing their potential for intervention, determining change objectives. Thinking beyond traditional psychological/mental health approaches to community change. Prosocial effects of community projects involving multiple levels of action. Questscope: an extended example of community change in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Tyler’s decades of experience, and the lucid perspective of Developing Prosocial Communities across Cultures, brings social and community psychologists new assurance that social programs can have greater relevance to the people and groups they serve.

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