Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
346159 Children and Youth Services Review 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Studies that focus on community-level factors associated with the resilience of youth and families reflect a shift in perspective from community deficits to the potential of communities to facilitate the mobilization of human and physical resources. Physical and social capital (both informal relationships and formal service provision) give communities the potential to recover from dramatic change, sustain their adaptability, and support new growth. This paper reviews key concepts such as these as they relate to how young people access informal supports and formal services that promote resilience. A discussion of the relevant research highlights the way protective processes function when children, youth and families are exposed to catastrophic human-made and natural events. Five principles are suggested to help promote community resilience. Implications for the design and implementation of interventions are discussed with a focus on making informal supports more available and formal services coordinated, continuous, co-located, negotiated, culturally relevant and effective.

► Physical and social capital (including services) give communities the potential to recover from dramatic change. ► Community resilience requires resources to be available and accessible. ► Early intervention provides individuals with the facilitated capacity to recover from adversity. ► Interventions are effective when coordinated, continuous, co-located, negotiated, and culturally relevant.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health
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