SC10 – Multisystemic Approaches to Individual and Collective Resilience: Discovering Culturally and Contextually Sensitive Patterns to Thriving

Lecturer: Michael Ungar
Fields: Social Science; Psychology; Health Science; Community Development; Cultural Studies

Content

In this short course, Dr. Michael Ungar will explore the many different systems that contribute to experiences of individual and collective resilience, as well as the methods used to research multisystemic resilience. The intent is to integrate perspectives from studies of biological, psychological, social, institutional, and economic resilience, as well as those concerned with the built and natural environments. The course will also focus on how to research resilience in participatory ways to develop knowledge that informs policy and practice. An introduction to the theory of resilience will be followed by an overview of its application to populations under stress, as well as the tools used to assess resilience at individual and community levels. Using examples from studies conducted by Dr. Ungar and his colleagues at the Resilience Research Centre, students will have an opportunity to reflect on how multiple systems influence one another over time and in culturally nuanced ways. Discussion will include topics such as contextualization of the resilience concept, measure development to account for positive developmental processes, and the many aspects of resilience that need to be considered in designing research and developing programs and policies to improve the capacity of populations to cope with atypical stressors. Participants are encouraged to bring questions relating to their own research topics whether from the natural, biological, or social sciences.

Literature

  • Ungar, M. & Theron, L. (2019). Resilience and mental health: How multisystemic processes contribute to positive outcomes. Lancet Psychiatry, 7(5), 441-448. Doi:10.1016/S2215-0366(19)30434-1
  • Ungar, M. (2018). Systemic resilience: Principles and processes for a science of change in contexts of adversity. Ecology & Society, 23(4). Doi: 10.5751/ES-10385-230434.
  • Ungar M. (Ed.)(2021). Multisystemic resilience: Adaptation and transformation in contexts of change. New York: Oxford University Press. (Available open access: https://oxford.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.1093/oso/9780190095888.001.0001/oso-9780190095888)

Lecturer

Michael Ungar, Ph.D., is a Family Therapist and Professor of Social Work at Dalhousie University where he holds the Canada Research Chair in Child, Family and Community Resilience. His research on resilience around the world and across cultures has made him the number one ranked Social Work scholar in the world, with numerous educational institutions, government agencies, not-for-profits and businesses relying on his research and clinical work to guide their approaches to nurturing child, family, organizational and community wellbeing under stress. He the author of over 250 peer reviewed papers and book chapters, as well as 18 books for researchers, mental health professionals, and lay audiences, including his most recent works The Limits of Resilience: When to Persevere, When to Change, and When to Quit (forthcoming January, 2024), a book for individuals and organizations under stress, Multisystemic Resilience: Adaptation and Transformation in Contexts of Change, an open access compilation of 39 scholarly papers from a dozen different disciplines, and Working with Children and Youth with Complex Needs: 20 Skills to Build Resilience, a book for mental health professionals. As well as having received numerous awards for his work, including the Canadian Association of Social Workers National Distinguished Service Award and being named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Dr. Ungar maintains a blog titled Nurturing Resilience which can be read on Psychology Today’s website.

Affiliation: Dalhousie University
Homepage: www.resilienceresearch.org; www.michaelungar.com