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Wellness as Fairness

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TLDR
It is argued that distinct conditions of justice lead to diverse wellness outcomes through a series of psychosocial processes that operate within and across personal, interpersonal, organizational and community contexts.
Abstract
I argue that distinct conditions of justice lead to diverse wellness outcomes through a series of psychosocial processes. Optimal conditions of justice, suboptimal conditions of justice, vulnerable conditions of injustice, and persisting conditions of injustice lead to thriving, coping, confronting, and suffering, respectively. The processes that mediate between optimal conditions of justice and thriving include the promotion of responsive conditions, the prevention of threats, individual pursuit, and avoidance of comparisons. The mechanisms that mediate between suboptimal conditions of justice and coping include resilience, adaptation, compensation, and downward comparisons. Critical experiences, critical consciousness, critical action, and righteous comparisons mediate between vulnerable conditions of injustice and confrontation with the system. Oppression, internalization, helplessness, and upward comparisons mediate between persisting conditions of injustice and suffering. These psychosocial processes operate within and across personal, interpersonal, organizational and community contexts. Different types of justice are hypothesized to influence well-being within each context. Intrapersonal injustice operates at the personal level, whereas distributive, procedural, relational, and developmental justice impact interpersonal well-being. At the organizational level, distributive, procedural, relational and informational justice influence well-being. Finally, at the community level, distributive, procedural, retributive, and cultural justice support community wellness. Data from a variety of sources support the suggested connections between justice and well-being.

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Citations
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Development and Validation of the Critical Consciousness Scale

TL;DR: The Critical Consciousness Scale (CCS) as mentioned in this paper is a measure of critical consciousness, defined as the capacity of oppressed or marginalized people to critically analyze their social and political conditions, endorsement of societal equality, and action to change perceived inequities.
Posted Content

The Politics of Happiness: What Government Can Learn from the New Research on Well-Being

TL;DR: In this article, former Harvard president Derek Bok examines how governments could use the rapidly growing research data on what makes people happy in a variety of policy areas to increase well-being and improve the quality of life for all their citizens.
Journal ArticleDOI

Annual Research Review: The experience of youth with political conflict – challenging notions of resilience and encouraging research refinement

TL;DR: This paper focuses on the discordance between expectations of widespread dysfunction among conflict-affected youth and a body of empirical evidence that does not confirm these expectations, and heavy reliance on cross-sectional rather than longitudinal studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Counterspaces: A Unit of Analysis for Understanding the Role of Settings in Marginalized Individuals’ Adaptive Responses to Oppression

TL;DR: A conceptual framework is proposed that highlights a specific type of setting, referred to as “counterspaces,” which promotes the psychological well-being of individuals who experience oppression, and suggests that “challenging” can occur through at least three processes.
References
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Book

Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness

TL;DR: In Nudge as discussed by the authors, Thaler and Sunstein argue that human beings are susceptible to various biases that can lead us to blunder and make bad decisions involving education, personal finance, health care, mortgages and credit cards, the family, and even the planet itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social relationships and health.

TL;DR: Experimental and quasi-experimental studies suggest that social isolation is a major risk factor for mortality from widely varying causes and the mechanisms through which social relationships affect health remain to be explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on the social determinants of health

TL;DR: The Commission on Social Determinants of Health (CSDH) as mentioned in this paper was created to marshal the evidence on what can be done to promote health equity and to foster a global movement to achieve it.

Psychosocial Resilience and Protective Mechanisms

TL;DR: The concept of mechanisms that protect people against the psychological risks associated with adversity is discussed in relation to four main processes: reduction of risk impact, reduction of negative chain reactions, establishment and maintenance of self-esteem and self-efficacy, and opening up of opportunities.
Book

Education for critical consciousness

Paulo Freire
TL;DR: The Pedagogy of the Oppressed as mentioned in this paper is the main statement of Freire's revolutionary method of education, which takes the life situation of the learner as its starting point and the raising of consciousness and the overcoming of obstacles as its goals.