Journal of Social and Political Psychology,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
11(1), P. 145 - 166
Published: April 18, 2023
We
tested
how
well
the
Identity-Deprivation-Efficacy-Action-Subjective-wellbeing
(IDEAS)
model
predicts
citizens’
intentions
to
engage
in
collective
action
opposing
their
government,
and
subjective
well-being.
Representative
samples
from
Scotland,
Wales,
county
of
Kent
England
were
surveyed
during
COVID-19
pandemic
October
2020
(N
=
1,536).
Results
largely
support
our
preregistered
hypotheses,
confirming
that
IDEAS
offers
a
valid
explanatory
framework
for
relative
deprivation
both
one’s
government
levels
In
case
action,
there
significant
effects
(cognitive
affective)
efficacy
on
social
change
beliefs,
which
turn
positively
predicted
intentions.
The
role
national
identification
was
more
nuanced,
revealing
negative
indirect
via
deprivation,
positive
effect
political
orientation.
Findings
also
suggest
interesting
directions
future
research
identification.
Manchester University Press eBooks,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: May 28, 2024
COVID-19
resulted
in
democratic
nation
states
worldwide
implementing
a
state
of
emergency,
immediately
imposing
restrictions
on
individual
liberty
–
for
instance,
the
freedom
to
live,
travel
and
work.
In
many
instances,
were
imposed
without
clarity
about
terms,
conditions
circumstances
under
which
they
would
be
lifted,
creating
concern
long-term
health
placing
democracy
itself
into
lockdown.
Despite
evident
strain
placed
core
values
rights,
policymakers,
scientists
researchers
also
simultaneously
relied
principles
rights
responsibility
(in
some
instances
successfully,
other
unsuccessfully)
generate
legitimacy
their
actions,
encourage
compliance
engender
wider
social
support.
These
tensions
created
crisis
confidence
pandemic
response
institutions
responsible
leading
them,
rather
than
crisis.
Policymakers
needed
recognise
that
both
relying
reconstituting
'social
contract'
at
time
crisis,
with
citizens
as
potential
active
co-creators
contract,
simply
passive
citizens.
Drawing
from
wide
range
case
studies
findings
citizen
juries
good
governance
undertaken
during
pandemic,
I
argue
this
chapter
need,
future
crises,
create
participatory
infrastructures
act
check
against
risks
concentrating
executive
power
through
blunt
instruments
emergency
decision-making.
Such
structures
reduce
risk
is
'paused'
or
'lockdown'.
Deleted Journal,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
21(1)
Published: Nov. 7, 2024
The
COVID-19
pandemic
has
ushered
in
profound
educational,
occupational,
and
familial
challenges
for
school-aged
children
their
primary
caregivers.
During
this
transitional
period,
resilience
was
often
featured
discourse
as
a
solution
to
managing
these
unprecedented
shifts.
However,
very
little
concrete
information
provided
how
caregivers
should
or
could
mobilize
oft-cited
resource.
Our
qualitative
study
designed
explore
survived
thrived,
using
an
experiential
window
through
which
better
understand
they
coped
with
the
complex,
by
pandemic.
One-hour
interviews
were
conducted
(n
=
22,
all
but
two
identified
female).
Analysis
revealed
that
understood
be
surviving
making
it
fewest
scars
both
them
children.
Caregivers
cultivated
finding
joy
during
hardships,
supporting
children's
adaptations
changing
context,
resisting
rules.
Surviving
required
resilience,
while
emerged
caregivers'
definitions,
lived
experience
highlights
joy,
adaptations,
resistance
employed
cultivate
resilience.
International Journal of Behavioral Medicine,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: Dec. 30, 2024
Addressing
the
effects
of
non-compliance
with
health-related
recommendations
in
pandemics
is
needed
for
informed
decision-making.
This
longitudinal
study
investigated
on
mental
health
and
academic
self-efficacy
among
university
students
Sweden.
Frontiers in Public Health,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
11
Published: Feb. 23, 2023
The
protection
of
children
is
a
major
driver
behavior
among
those
in
charge
their
care.
We
evaluated
whether
compliance
with
preventive
measures
against
SARS-CoV-2
infection
adults
living
was
different
from
that
not
them,
2020.
used
the
COSMO-SPAIN
(N
=
867)
and
nationally
representative
ENE-COVID
29,926)
surveys
to
estimate
prevalence
(95%
confidence
interval).
Logistic
model
based
standardization
methods
were
applied
standardized
differences
(SPrD)
overall
distribution
age,
sex,
education,
history
COVID-19,
residence
other
>60
yrs
household.
observed
more
frequently
avoided
bars
(SPrDENE-COVID:
4.2%;
95%
CI:
2.3-6.1),
crowded
places
(SPrDCOSMO:
8.0%;
0.6-15.1)
did
use
public
transportation
4.9%;
3.0-6.7).
They
also
worried
about
work
family
conciliation
12.2%;
4.8-19.5)
closure
education
centers
26.5%;
19.4-33.6).
In
general,
adopted
slightly
social
distancing
measures.
Journal of Social and Political Psychology,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
11(1), P. 145 - 166
Published: April 18, 2023
We
tested
how
well
the
Identity-Deprivation-Efficacy-Action-Subjective-wellbeing
(IDEAS)
model
predicts
citizens’
intentions
to
engage
in
collective
action
opposing
their
government,
and
subjective
well-being.
Representative
samples
from
Scotland,
Wales,
county
of
Kent
England
were
surveyed
during
COVID-19
pandemic
October
2020
(N
=
1,536).
Results
largely
support
our
preregistered
hypotheses,
confirming
that
IDEAS
offers
a
valid
explanatory
framework
for
relative
deprivation
both
one’s
government
levels
In
case
action,
there
significant
effects
(cognitive
affective)
efficacy
on
social
change
beliefs,
which
turn
positively
predicted
intentions.
The
role
national
identification
was
more
nuanced,
revealing
negative
indirect
via
deprivation,
positive
effect
political
orientation.
Findings
also
suggest
interesting
directions
future
research
identification.