BK354_Web Ready.pdf

This book sheds light on how humans deal with adversity, especially in uncertain and turbulent times, as seen during the COVID-19 pandemic. Resilience theory has become popular in scholarly discourse, and the term is difficult to define as so many opinions exist. This book aims to engage critically...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: AOSIS 2023
id oapen-20.500.12657-63052
record_format dspace
spelling oapen-20.500.12657-630522024-03-28T08:18:51Z Resilience in a VUCA world Potgieter, Annette Beukes, Jacques Biernot, David Bredell, Sandra Johannisen, Jessica Lombaard, Christo Kabongo, Luc Prinsloo, Reineth C.E. Siegelaar, Melissa C. Steyn, Marileen Vanhoutte, Kristof K.P. Venter, Nioma Potgieter, Annette Resilience;online education;social work and resilience;theology and resilience;digitalisation;adversity;VUCA thema EDItEUR::Q Philosophy and Religion::QR Religion and beliefs::QRM Christianity thema EDItEUR::Q Philosophy and Religion::QR Religion and beliefs::QRV Aspects of religion::QRVG Theology This book sheds light on how humans deal with adversity, especially in uncertain and turbulent times, as seen during the COVID-19 pandemic. Resilience theory has become popular in scholarly discourse, and the term is difficult to define as so many opinions exist. This book aims to engage critically with resilience theory as a scholarly debate from the unique vantage point of the world of social work as well as theology. This specific aspect of originality contributes to the generation of new knowledge in the broad field of social sciences and humanities. The inception of the book stems from an interdisciplinary conference held at Hugenote Kollege, Wellington, where scholars from social work as well as theology engaged in a discourse on resilience. Professor Adrian van Breda, a specialist in resilience theory and from the social work department of the University of Johannesburg, was one of the keynote speakers, inspiring scholars to understand what is meant by resilience. Professor Yolanda Dreyer from the University of Pretoria and a seasoned theologian and prolific writer on trauma and resilience, was also a keynote speaker, providing insights from a theological perspective. The collaboration between these two fields of thought is unique and rendered new insights into engaging with resilience. Different methodologies and perspectives from researchers are prevalent as contributors are from different scholarly fields. The book ranges from linguistical, liturgical, philosophical, practical, autoethnographical, anthropological, sociological, and online methodological approaches contributing to ways to deal with traumatic, turbulent and trying times. The book is divided into four main themes that stood out from the results obtained at the conference, namely, (1) religious imagination and resilience, (2) communities and resilience, (3) online teaching and resilience, and (4) the resilience of philosophical questions. 2023-05-22T14:32:14Z 2023-05-22T14:32:14Z 2022 book 9781779952363 9781779952370 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/63052 eng HTS Religion & Society Series application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International BK354_Web Ready.pdf AOSIS AOSIS Publishing 10.4102/aosis.2022.BK354 10.4102/aosis.2022.BK354 d7387d49-5f5c-4cd8-8640-ed0a752627b7 9781779952363 9781779952370 AOSIS Publishing 15 190 Capetown open access
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language English
description This book sheds light on how humans deal with adversity, especially in uncertain and turbulent times, as seen during the COVID-19 pandemic. Resilience theory has become popular in scholarly discourse, and the term is difficult to define as so many opinions exist. This book aims to engage critically with resilience theory as a scholarly debate from the unique vantage point of the world of social work as well as theology. This specific aspect of originality contributes to the generation of new knowledge in the broad field of social sciences and humanities. The inception of the book stems from an interdisciplinary conference held at Hugenote Kollege, Wellington, where scholars from social work as well as theology engaged in a discourse on resilience. Professor Adrian van Breda, a specialist in resilience theory and from the social work department of the University of Johannesburg, was one of the keynote speakers, inspiring scholars to understand what is meant by resilience. Professor Yolanda Dreyer from the University of Pretoria and a seasoned theologian and prolific writer on trauma and resilience, was also a keynote speaker, providing insights from a theological perspective. The collaboration between these two fields of thought is unique and rendered new insights into engaging with resilience. Different methodologies and perspectives from researchers are prevalent as contributors are from different scholarly fields. The book ranges from linguistical, liturgical, philosophical, practical, autoethnographical, anthropological, sociological, and online methodological approaches contributing to ways to deal with traumatic, turbulent and trying times. The book is divided into four main themes that stood out from the results obtained at the conference, namely, (1) religious imagination and resilience, (2) communities and resilience, (3) online teaching and resilience, and (4) the resilience of philosophical questions.
title BK354_Web Ready.pdf
spellingShingle BK354_Web Ready.pdf
title_short BK354_Web Ready.pdf
title_full BK354_Web Ready.pdf
title_fullStr BK354_Web Ready.pdf
title_full_unstemmed BK354_Web Ready.pdf
title_sort bk354_web ready.pdf
publisher AOSIS
publishDate 2023
_version_ 1799945257309175808