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دانلود کتاب Psychology and Rural Contexts: Psychosocial Dialogues from Latin America

دانلود کتاب روانشناسی و زمینه های روستایی: گفتگوهای روانی اجتماعی از آمریکای لاتین

Psychology and Rural Contexts: Psychosocial Dialogues from Latin America

مشخصات کتاب

Psychology and Rural Contexts: Psychosocial Dialogues from Latin America

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان: , , ,   
سری:  
ISBN (شابک) : 3030829952, 9783030829957 
ناشر: Springer 
سال نشر: 2022 
تعداد صفحات: 361 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 5 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 61,000



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توجه داشته باشید کتاب روانشناسی و زمینه های روستایی: گفتگوهای روانی اجتماعی از آمریکای لاتین نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


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فهرست مطالب

Preface
Acknowledgments
Contents
Contributors
Part I: Introduction
	Chapter 1: Psychology and Rural Contexts: Psychosocial Dialogues
		1.1 Introduction
		1.2 Understanding Rural Contexts
		1.3 Research Lines in Psychology and Rural Contexts
			1.3.1 Rural Contexts and Their Modes of Meaning
			1.3.2 Mental Health
			1.3.3 Gender Relations
		1.4 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 2: Rural Psychology: Literature Review, Reasons for Its Need, and Challenges
		2.1 Introduction
		2.2 Background Analysis and Literature Review (in English, Spanish, and Portuguese)
			2.2.1 Rural Psychology in the Institutional Context
			2.2.2 The Emergence of the Interest in Rural Psychology
			2.2.3 Areas of Interest and Topics of Debate in Rural Psychology (in English, Spanish, and Portuguese)
			2.2.4 Rural Psychology in the Developing and the Developed World
		2.3 Why Do We Need a Rural Psychology?
		2.4 Rural Psychology: Meaning and Preliminary Characteristics
		2.5 Challenges and Final Reflections
		References
Part II: Mental Health and Rural Populations
	Chapter 3: Working with Use of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drugs in Rural Communities
		3.1 Introduction
		3.2 Challenges to (Mental) Health Care and Drug Use in Rural Contexts
		3.3 Community Psychology and Rural Contexts: A Possible Approximation
		3.4 Perspectives for Work in the Field of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drugs in Rural Settings
		3.5 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 4: Racially Stigmatized Populations, Necropolitics, and Mental Health in Rural Contexts
		4.1 On Racism and Health
		4.2 Inequality Markers in Mental Health in Quilombola Territories
			4.2.1 Bom Jesus Municipality (RN)
			4.2.2 Esperantina (PI) Municipality
		4.3 Mental Health Needs, Alcohol Use, and Common Mental Illnesses
		4.4 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 5: Psychology in Rural Contexts: An Experience of Mental Health Specialized Support to Family Health Teams
		5.1 Introduction
		5.2 Routes in the Rural Zone: A Construction of Specialized Support Based on Bond
		5.3 Mental Health Reception
		5.4 Challenges to Specialized Support in Mental Health in Rural Zones
		5.5 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 6: Suicide in the Inỹ Population: Between the Spell and the Disarrangement of “Desire”
		6.1 Introduction
		6.2 About the Inỹ: Territoriality, Becoming an Inỹ Man/Woman, and Rituals of Transition to Adulthood
		6.3 Suicide Data Among Inỹ People: Karajá and Javaé
		6.4 Inỹ Interpretation and an Anthropological Intercultural Point of View
		6.5 Possible Contributions from a Psychological Point of View
		6.6 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 7: Alcohol, Drugs and Indigenous Communities: Report of a Psychosocial Intervention
		7.1 Introduction
		7.2 Indigenous Alcoholization and Some Psychosocial Repercussions
		7.3 Psychology, Psychosocial Intervention and Community Insertion
		7.4 Detailing the Intervention
			7.4.1 Community Diagnosis
			7.4.2 Rounds of Conversation
		7.5 Conclusion
		References
	Chapter 8: For a Non-parasitic Life: Resistance and Creation in Rural Communities of Rio Grande Do Sul, Brazil
		8.1 Entering the Setting
		8.2 Subjetivities Parasitized by the Colony and the Context of the Interventions on the Less Cinematographic Setting
		8.3 Scene 1: Bacuralizing with “Nativistas da Serra” (“Sierra Nativists”)
			8.3.1 Clapperboard I: Nativistas Da Serra, Diabolical Visions for Who Does Not Bring Money
			8.3.2 Clapperboard II: The Pixurum for Ulisses’ House
		8.4 Scene 2: Bacuralizing in the Serão and Other Health Rituals
		8.5 Last Clapperboard: Ending Not So Happy, Not So End
		References
Part III: Social Movements, Communities and Resistance Practices
	Chapter 9: Sense of Us in the Face of the Pandemic: A Psychosocial and Community Approach
		9.1 Introduction
		9.2 Pandemic in Mexican Indigenous Peoples: A Perspective from Our America
		9.3 Sense of Us as a Community Psychosocial Strength in Dealing with the Pandemic
		9.4 Living the Us in Pandemic Times
		9.5 Consciousness of Us in Pandemic Times
		9.6 Feeling the Us in a Time of Pandemic
		9.7 Final Reflections
		References
	Chapter 10: Quilombola Communities in Brazil: Advances and Struggles in the Face of Setbacks Experienced in the Current Neoliberal Scenario
		10.1 Introduction
		10.2 Definitions and Productions of the Quilombo Through Brazilian History
		10.3 From the Legal, Media, Parliamentary Coup to the Risk to Democratic Stances and Neoliberal Entrenchment: The Quilombola Communities Are Under a Relentless Attack in the Country!
		References
	Chapter 11: Artisanal Fishing Work: The Aesthetics of Art and the Ethics of the Common
		11.1 Introduction
		11.2 The Ingenium Crystallization in Presupposed Identities and the Ethical-Political Suffering
		11.3 The Work-Art of Artisanal Fishing: Body Aches and the Potency of Life
		11.4 Conclusions
		References
	Chapter 12: Urban and Rural Articulations in an Agroecological Space in the Brazilian Northeast
		12.1 Introduction
		12.2 About a Community Psychosocial Approach
		12.3 Situating Our Action Research
		12.4 Dialogues About/with That Experience
		12.5 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 13: “The Work That Makes One Live Alive”: The Meanings of Work for Rural Settlers
		13.1 Introduction
		13.2 Working on the “Land for Work”
		13.3 Final Considerations
		References
Part IV: Gender Relations and Subjectivation Processes
	Chapter 14: Poverty and Social Support: An Analysis of Women Living in Rural Communities
		14.1 Introduction
		14.2 Method
			14.2.1 Participants
			14.2.2 Instruments, Procedures, and Analysis
			14.2.3 Ethical Considerations
		14.3 Social Support and the Lives of Women
		14.4 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 15: Women in Movement and the Reinvention of Existence: Political Action, Agency, and Subjectivation Processes
		15.1 Women’s Practices in Rural Contexts: Agency and Subjectivation Processes
		15.2 About the Narratives of Self and Experience-Affections
		15.3 From the Narratives of Self that Keep Moving: Links Between Land, Work, and Political Action
		15.4 Women in Movement and the Reinvention of Existence
		References
	Chapter 16: Indigenous Women as Political Subjects in Brazil
		16.1 Introduction
		16.2 Between Feminism, Psychology, and Anthropology
		16.3 Indigenous Women in Movements
		16.4 Indigenous Women and Feminism
		16.5 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 17: Decolonial Understandings of Young Homosexual Rural Men’s Ways of Life: Insurgencies and Disobediences
		17.1 Introduction
		17.2 The Colonialities of Power, Knowledge, Being, and Gender
		17.3 Decoloniality and the Affirmation of Ways of Life: Insurgencies and Disobediences
		17.4 The Decolonizing Process of Research in Psychology
		17.5 Insurgent and Disobedient Ways of Being a Young Rural Homosexual Man
		17.6 Final Considerations (and Decolonizations)
		References
Part V: Environment and Sustainability
	Chapter 18: Rural Territories and Life Production: Approaches from Environmental Psychology
		18.1 Environmental Psychology and the Rural: Some Approaches
		18.2 Ruralities in Environmental Psychology: Brazilian Experiences
		18.3 Contributions from Other Areas of Knowledge About the Rural
		18.4 Final Notes
		References
	Chapter 19: Assembly of the Knowledge Landscape: A Social Technology for Health Care and the Enhancement of the Way of Life in Amazonian Riverine Communities
		19.1 Introduction
		19.2 Methodology
		19.3 Assembly of the Knowledge Landscape (AKL)
		19.4 AKL as a Social Technology
		19.5 Knowledge, Science, Technology, and Innovation
		19.6 Organization and Systematization
		19.7 Degree of Innovation
		19.8 Participation, Citizenship, and Democracy
		19.9 Participatory Methodology
		19.10 Diffusion
		19.11 Participation, Citizenship, and Democracy
		19.12 Dialogue Between Knowledges
		19.13 Appropriation and Empowerment
		19.14 Social Relevance
		19.15 Sustainability
		19.16 Social Transformation
		19.17 Final Considerations
		References
	Chapter 20: Human-Wildlife Interactions and Rural Environmental Psychology in Mexico
		20.1 Introduction
		20.2 Human-Wildlife Interactions
		20.3 Rural Environmental Psychology
		20.4 Psychology Contributions to Human-Wildlife Interactions
		20.5 Conclusion
		References
	Chapter 21: Transitioning Ruralities: Migration Processes and Emerging Socioenvironmental Spaces
		21.1 Introduction
		21.2 Theoretical Background
			21.2.1 New Rurality
			21.2.2 Amenity Migration
			21.2.3 Environmental Space and Sustainability
		21.3 Story Analysis and Discussion
			21.3.1 Receiving Community and Rural Cultural Worldviews
			21.3.2 Migrant Community and Urban-Specific Notions
			21.3.3 Community Interaction from a New Rurality Perspective
		21.4 Conclusion
		References
Index




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