Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction: Historical and theoretical roots of developmental psychopathology
- Part II Contributions of the high-risk child paradigm: continuities and changes in adaptation during development
- Part III Competence under adversity: individual and family differences in resilience
- 9 Psychosocial resilience and protective mechanisms
- 10 Maternal stress and children's development: prediction of school outcomes and identification of protective factors
- 11 Competence under stress: risk and protective factors
- 12 Stress-resistant families and stress-resistant children
- 13 Children's adjustment to parental divorce: self-image, social relations, and school performance
- Part IV The challenge of adolescence for developmental psychopathology
- Part V Factors in the development of schizophrenia and other severe psychopathology in late adolescence and adulthood
- A closing note: Reflections on the future
- Author index
- Subject index
11 - Competence under stress: risk and protective factors
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction: Historical and theoretical roots of developmental psychopathology
- Part II Contributions of the high-risk child paradigm: continuities and changes in adaptation during development
- Part III Competence under adversity: individual and family differences in resilience
- 9 Psychosocial resilience and protective mechanisms
- 10 Maternal stress and children's development: prediction of school outcomes and identification of protective factors
- 11 Competence under stress: risk and protective factors
- 12 Stress-resistant families and stress-resistant children
- 13 Children's adjustment to parental divorce: self-image, social relations, and school performance
- Part IV The challenge of adolescence for developmental psychopathology
- Part V Factors in the development of schizophrenia and other severe psychopathology in late adolescence and adulthood
- A closing note: Reflections on the future
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Developmental psychopathology is finally gaining recognition as a viable interdisciplinary perspective, providing an impetus for sustained studies of risk and protective factors in childhood (Cicchetti, 1984; Masten & Braswell, in press; Sroufe & Rutter, 1984). It has taken the field over a decade to catch up with Norman Garmezy and a few other pioneering psychopathologists who recognized the need for a developmental perspective and the theoretical and clinical significance of studying adaptation in children vulnerable to psychopathology (Garmezy, 1970, 1973, 1974a,b).
Over the past two decades at the University of Minnesota, Garmezy has translated his interest in positive responses to high-risk conditions into a research program that has encompassed a variety of studies under the rubric of “Project Competence.” These studies of adaptation have focused on normative samples as well as high-risk samples, including children at risk for maladaptation because of such factors as mental illness in a parent (see chapter 20, this volume), physical disability (Raison, 1982; Silverstein, 1982), and lifethreatening birth defects (see chapter 6, this volume). Common to these diverse studies has been the focus on competence, correcting psychologists’ traditional neglect of successful adaptation under adverse conditions (Garmezy, 1981; Garmezy & Devine, 1984; Garmezy & Tellegen, 1984).
The Project Competence studies of children were a natural outgrowth of Garmezy's earlier studies of schizophrenic adults that led him to an interest in premorbid competence (Garmezy & Rodnick, 1959; see chapter 22, this volume) and then to the study of adaptation in children at risk for schizophrenia (Garmezy, 1970, 1971). Garmezy participated in the consortium of risk researchers who undertook the first generation of high-risk studies in psychopathology, following the early lead of Fish, Mednick, and Schulsinger to study offspring of schizophrenic parents (Garmezy, 1974c,d).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1990
- 63
- Cited by