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Laurie D. McCubbin

Researcher at Washington State University

Publications -  27
Citations -  1309

Laurie D. McCubbin is an academic researcher from Washington State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Indigenous & Native Hawaiians. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 26 publications receiving 1185 citations. Previous affiliations of Laurie D. McCubbin include University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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Indigenous Ways of Knowing: Implications for Participatory Research and Community

TL;DR: Challenges to research partnerships include how to distribute the benefits of the research findings when academic or external needs contrast with the need to protect indigenous knowledge.
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Native Hawaiians and psychology: the cultural and historical context of indigenous ways of knowing

TL;DR: Psychological research on Native Hawaiians conducted in the 19th through the 21st centuries is reviewed to provide a historical orientation to this indigenous group, to increase awareness of the complexities of research about Native Hawaiian, and to draw attention to emerging issues, practices, and challenges of psychological research emphasizing indigenous health and well-being.
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Resilience, Family Adversity and Well-Being Among Hawaiian and Non-Hawaiian Adolescents

TL;DR: The findings support the need for intervention programs designed to promote resilience in adolescents, including highlighting the importance of the family, and the need to design and evaluate programs that promote well-being, enhance resilience and improve mental health in culturally appropriate ways.
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Relational Well‐being: An Indigenous Perspective and Measure

TL;DR: Relational Well-being (RWB II) as mentioned in this paper is a 14-item measure rooted in beliefs and values emphasizing family, ancestors, culture, and harmony with nature, which was developed and tested with a sample of indigenous Hawaiians in Hawaii.
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An evaluation of recovery factors for foster care alumni with physical or psychiatric impairments: Predictors of psychological outcomes.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the long-term psychological effects of risk factors associated with being in foster care and found that living with foster parents that were perceived as helpful and receiving mental health services were significant for self-esteem outcomes.