Loretta Pyles
University at Albany, SUNY
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Publication
Featured researches published by Loretta Pyles.
Journal of religion and spirituality in social work : social thought | 2011
Tuti Alawiyah MHum; Holly Bell; Loretta Pyles; Ratonia C. Runnels Lmsw
Research has shown that spirituality and religion are important sources of resilience and coping in adversity such as disasters, particularly for African Americans. In addition, churches and faith-based service providers are key actors in disaster relief and recovery. After Hurricane Katrina, research on survivors has focused little on the role of spirituality and religion in their recovery. This case study illustrates that even without soliciting it, survivors who evacuated to a host city talked about the importance of spirituality and religion in their recovery process. Further, interviews and observations with local service providers illustrate that few practitioners utilized spirituality or religion as a resource and that coordination between faith-based and secular service providers was problematic. Our research highlights a neglected area of cultural competence for those providing services to Katrina survivors. We discuss the implications for social work policy and practice.
Journal of Community Practice | 2008
Loretta Pyles; Tonya Cross
ABSTRACT This research explored the role of social capital, particularly civic engagement and social trust, in community revitalization efforts in a primarily African American post-Katrina neighborhood (n = 153). Findings reveal high levels of participation in neighborhood and political activities but low levels of social trust. Eighty-four percent of this primarily African American sample reported that they do not trust people of other races as compared to 23 to 32% of African American respondents in the national study. Drawing from critical theoretical perspectives, we offer a critique of the limits of social capital theory as well as a discussion of the importance of building social and racial trust as central components of community development practice. Implications include emphasizing organizational capacity-building activities, community organizing training, and racial reconciliation efforts in post-disaster environments.
Critical Social Policy | 2017
Loretta Pyles; Juliana Svistova; Suran Ahn
Through a critical discourse analysis of news media after the US Gulf Coast hurricane Katrina and the Haiti earthquake disasters, we draw from Soss et al.’s (2011) ideas about US poverty governance – neoliberal paternalism – to identify how a similar phenomenon of ‘neoliberal disaster governance’ (NDG) operates in these contexts. NDG is a set of discourses, policies, and practices, we argue, which endeavors to control disaster survivors in order to further the ends of neoliberal capitalism. Specifically, we find several key story lines that legitimate and perpetuate NDG, namely disaster capitalism, securitization and militarization of disaster settings, discourses of racial cleansing, and displacement.
Journal of Teaching in Social Work | 2014
Loretta Pyles
Specifically dedicated to the skills that social workers need to advance community practice, this creative book is long overdue. Grounded in the wisdom and evidence of well-honed interpersonal soci...
Community Development Journal | 2011
Loretta Pyles
Community Development Journal | 2012
Loretta Pyles; Scott Harding
Archive | 2009
Loretta Pyles
Disasters | 2018
Loretta Pyles; Juliana Svistova; Suran Ahn; Tom Birkland
British Journal of Social Work | 2016
Loretta Pyles
Social Development Issues | 2014
Juliana Svistova; Loretta Pyles; Josué André