Galuola, A NIU-Wave of Psychological Practices
Buch, Englisch, 208 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 524 g
ISBN: 978-3-031-14431-8
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
This book provides an overview of Pacific-Indigenous knowledge as insights of Oceanic citizen-science to inform culturally-safe practice for psychology. It profiles contemporary Pacific needs in areas of crisis such as family violence, education disparities and health inequities, and points to ancient Pacific-indigenous knowledges as tools of healing for global diasporic communities in need. The historical evolution of psychology’s knowledge base and practice illustrates a fundamental crisis in the method of producing knowledge for psychology - the absence of Pacific-indigenous cultural knowledge. It suggests more effective research methodologies grounded in Pacific-Indigenous epistemologies and ontologies for psychology and overall community capability. It fosters practice perspectives and strategies based on NIU-psychology (New Indigenous Understandings) for innovative solutions to modern-day crises of humanity.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Part I. Context: Changing tides in knowledge construction for re-informing psychology.- Fa’asinomaga – Introducing the Pacific diaspora.- The crisis of ‘importing’ psychology for practice in Oceania.- New problems need NIU method - the birth of Pacific-Indigenous psychology.- Saili Matagi: example of Pacific-indigenous psychology through offender rehabilitation.- Part II. Rediscovery: Impact of culture through language with Samoa’s collective houses of wisdom.- Fa’afaletui: the process of collective wisdom-searching with NIU-method.- Collaborators for Change - Notable cultural authorities.- Collaborators for Change - Community-village leaders.- Collaborators for Change - Church leaders.- Part III. NIU-psychology: Reducing inequalities through cultural innovation.- Suli vs Tagata Noa - The psyche of being ‘others-centred’.- Tofa Sa’ili – NIU metrics for measuring change.- Va’ai, Fa’alogo ma Tautala: NIU-Ideology reducing inequalities in human development.- NIU-Psychology forsustainable wellbeing.