A critical review of studies of South African youth resilience, 1990–2008
Abstract
Given the growing emphasis in research and service provision on strengths rather than deficits,
the focus on youth support in the South African Children’s Act of 2005 and the lack of educational,
therapeutic and other resources for most South Africans, insight into, and transdisciplinary
commitment to, resilience is crucial. Resilience, or the phenomenon of ‘bouncing back’ from adversity,
is common to societies that grapple with threatened well-being. Increasingly, international resilience
studies have suggested that the capacity to rebound is nurtured by multiple resources that protect
against risk and that these resources are rooted in culture. In this paper, we critically reviewed 23
articles that focus on South African youth resilience, published in academic journals between 1990
and 2008. By broadly comparing South African findings to those of international studies, we argued
for continued research into the phenomenon of resilience and for a keener focus on the cultural and
contextual roots of resilience that are endemic to South Africa. Although international resilience
research has begun to match the antecedents of resilience to specific contexts and/or cultures, South
African research hardly does so. Only when this gap in youth resilience research is addressed, will
psychologists, service providers, teachers and communities be suitably equipped to enable South
African youth towards sustained resilience
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/17963http://sajs.co.za/critical-review-studies-south-african-youth-resilience-1990%E2%80%932008/theron-linda-theron-adam
DOI: 10.4102/sajs.v106i7/8.252
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- Faculty of Humanities [2042]