Qui a inventé le mot résilience ?

Table des matières

Qui a inventé le mot résilience ?

Qui a inventé le mot résilience ?

Après John Bowlby, qui a introduit le terme dans ses écrits sur l'attachement, en France, c'est Boris Cyrulnik qui, à la fin des années 1990, médiatise le concept de résilience en psychanalyse, à partir de l'observation des survivants des camps de concentration, puis de divers groupes d'individus, dont les enfants des ...

Qui a inventé le terme de résilience ?

Boris Cyrulnik Boris Cyrulnik est une personnalité médiatique et un essayiste connu comme auteur d'ouvrages de psychologie et de récits de vie. Il a notamment vulgarisé le concept de « résilience » (renaître de sa souffrance) qu'il a tiré des écrits de John Bowlby.

What is the resilience theory?

  • The Resilience Theory. The Resilience Theory states that resiliency is determined by both risk and protective factors (Greff, Vansteenwegen & Ide, 2006; Zauszniewski, Bekhet & Suresky, 2009). Let’s have a deeper look at these conditions.

What does resilience mean?

  • Resilience is the process of adapting well in the face of adversity, trauma, tragedy, threats or significant sources of stress — such as family and relationship problems, serious health problems or workplace and financial stressors. It means "bouncing back" from difficult experiences.

What is resiliency factors?

  • Resilience and Protective Factors The term resilience refers to a person having experienced trauma or some traumatic event in life and is doing well given the circumstances (Jean Clinton, 2008). The amount of resilience that any one person may carry depends enormously on protective factors during childhood.

What is resilience research?

  • Resiliency research, supported by research on child development, family dynamics, school effectiveness, community development, and ethnographic studies capturing the voices of youth themselves, documents clearly the characteristics of family, school, and community environments that elicit and foster the natural resiliency in children.

Articles liés: