Resilience revisited: AIDS and resilience among a Yi ethnic minority in Southwest China

Author:

Ting Rachel Sing-Kiat1ORCID,Sundararajan Louise2ORCID,Luo Yuanshan3,Wang Junyi4,Zhang Kejia5

Affiliation:

1. Monash University Malaysia

2. Independent Researcher, USA

3. Zhongshan Experiment Middle School

4. Independent Researcher, Australia

5. Southwest Minzu University

Abstract

This study attempts to widen the conceptual space of resilience in (Western) psychology in order to better capture the resilience landscape of an ethnic minority group ravaged by the HIV/AIDS pandemic—the Nuosu-Yi in Southwest China. Without decolonizing the construct of resilience, non-Western versions of coping with adversities cannot be properly understood. Our process of decolonization of resilience involved two steps: First, we conducted semistructured interviews with the target population ( N = 21) to take inventory of their Indigenous notions of resilience. Second, for conceptual comparison, we mapped the themes and categories, derived from thematic analysis, of the interview data onto the conceptual space of the Resilience Scale for Adults (RSA), which we used as proxy for mainstream conceptualizations of resilience. This mapping revealed multiple lacunae in the theoretical framework of RSA, and unique properties in the Indigenous approach to adversities in contrast. Far reaching theoretical and practical implications of this investigation are discussed.

Funder

Travis Research Institutes subgrant

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,General Psychology

Reference56 articles.

1. Bamo A. (2003). Liangshan yizu de jibing xinyang yu yishiyiliang (shang) [The diseases, beliefs, and healing rituals among Yi people in Liangshan: Part 1]. Zongjiaoxue Yanjiu, 1, 37‒44. http://kns.cnki.net/KCMS/detail/detail.aspx?dbcode=CJFQ&dbname=CJFD2003&filename=ZJYJ200301007&v=MjExMDl1Um9GeURnVmI3TFB5ZlNaTEc0SHRMTXJvOUZZNFI4ZVgxTHV4WVM3RGgxVDNxVHJXTTFGckNVUkxPZlk=

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