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American Psychologist | 1989

Conservation of resources: A new attempt at conceptualizing stress.

Stevan E. Hobfoll

Major perspectives concerning stress are presented with the goal of clarifying the nature of what has proved to be a heuristic but vague construct. Current conceptualizations of stress are challenged as being too phenomenological and ambiguous, and consequently, not given to direct empirical testing. Indeed, it is argued that researchers have tended to avoid the problem of defining stress, choosing to study stress without reference to a clear framework. A new stress model called the model of conservation of resources is presented as an alternative. This resource-oriented model is based on the supposition that people strive to retain, project, and build resources and that what is threatening to them is the potential or actual loss of these valued resources. Implications of the model of conservation of resources for new research directions are discussed.


Applied Psychology | 2001

The influence of culture, community, and the nested-self in the stress process : advancing conservation of Resources theory

Stevan E. Hobfoll

Conservation of Resources (COR) theory predicts that resource loss is the principal ingredient in the stress process. Resource gain, in turn, is depicted as of increasing importance in the context of loss. Because resources are also used to prevent resource loss, at each stage of the stress process people are increasingly vulnerable to negative stress sequelae, that if ongoing result in rapid and impactful loss spirals. COR theory is seen as an alternative to appraisal-based stress theories because it relies more centrally on the objective and culturally construed nature of the environment in determining the stress process, rather than the individual’s personal construel. COR theory has been successfully employed in predicting a range of stress outcomes in organisational settings, health contexts, following traumatic stress, and in the face of everyday stressors. Recent advances in understanding the biological, cognitive, and social bases of stress responding are seen as consistent with the original formulation of COR theory, but call for envisioning of COR theory and the stress process within a more collectivist backdrop than was first posited. The role of both resource losses and gains in predicting positive stress outcomes is also considered. Finally, the limitations and applications of COR theory are discussed.


Review of General Psychology | 2002

Social and Psychological Resources and Adaptation

Stevan E. Hobfoll

Psychology has increasingly turned to the study of psychosocial resources in the examination of well-being. How resources are being studied and resource models that have been proffered are considered, and an attempt is made to examine elements that bridge across models. As resource models span health, community, cognitive, and clinical psychology, the question is raised of whether there is overuse of the resource metaphor or whether there exists some underlying principles that can be gleaned and incorporated to advance research. The contribution of resources for understanding multicultural and pan-historical adaptation in the face of challenge is considered.


Archive | 1998

Stress, Culture, and Community

Stevan E. Hobfoll

1.The Social and Historical Context of Stress. 2.The Evolutionary and Cultural Basis of the Stress Experience. 3.Conservation of Resources Theory: Principles and Corollaries. 4.Majesty, Mastery, and Malignment. 5.Our Coping as Individuals Within Families and Tribes. 6.Marching to a Different Drum, Singing the Same Song. 7.Turbulent Spiral or Graceful Pirouette: Cycles of Resource Loss and gain. 8.Stress Crossover: The Commerce of Resources Across the Borders that Divide and United People, Organizations, and Tribes. 9.Aiding Resource Acquisition and Protection in Ecological Context. Index.


Psychiatry MMC | 2007

Five essential elements of immediate and mid-term mass trauma intervention: empirical evidence

Stevan E. Hobfoll; Patricia J. Watson; Carl C. Bell; Richard A. Bryant; Melissa J. Brymer; Matthew J. Friedman; Merle Friedman; Berthold P. R. Gersons; Joop de Jong; Christopher M. Layne; Shira Maguen; Yuval Neria; Ann E. Norwood; Robert S. Pynoos; Dori B. Reissman; Josef I. Ruzek; Arieh Y. Shalev; Zahava Solomon; Alan M. Steinberg; Robert J. Ursano

Abstract Given the devastation caused by disasters and mass violence, it is critical that intervention policy be based on the most updated research findings. However, to date, no evidence–based consensus has been reached supporting a clear set of recommendations for intervention during the immediate and the mid–term post mass trauma phases. Because it is unlikely that there will be evidence in the near or mid–term future from clinical trials that cover the diversity of disaster and mass violence circumstances, we assembled a worldwide panel of experts on the study and treatment of those exposed to disaster and mass violence to extrapolate from related fields of research, and to gain consensus on intervention principles. We identified five empirically supported intervention principles that should be used to guide and inform intervention and prevention efforts at the early to mid–term stages. These are promoting: 1) a sense of safety, 2) calming, 3) a sense of self– and community efficacy, 4) connectedness, and 5) hope.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2003

Resource Loss, Resource Gain, and Emotional Outcomes Among Inner City Women

Stevan E. Hobfoll; Robert J. Johnson; Nicole Ennis; Anita P. Jackson

The authors examined a dynamic conceptualization of stress by investigating how economic stress, measured in terms of material loss, alters womens personal and social resources and how these changed resources impact anger and depressive mood. Resource change in womens mastery and social support over 9 months was significantly associated with changes in depressive mood and anger among 714 inner city women. Greater loss of mastery and social support was associated with increased depressive mood and anger. Loss of mastery and social support also mediated the impact of material loss on depressive mood and anger. Resource loss and worsening economic circumstances had more negative impact than resource gain and improving economic circumstances had positive impact, suggesting the greater saliency of loss than gain.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1995

Depression prevalence and incidence among inner-city pregnant and postpartum women

Stevan E. Hobfoll; Christian Ritter; Justin P. Lavin; Michael R. Hulsizer; Rebecca P. Cameron

A sample of 192 financially impoverished, inner-city women was assessed for clinical depression twice during pregnancy and once postpartum. At the first and second antepartum interviews, respectively, 27.6% and 24.5% of the women were depressed, controlling for pregnancy-related somatic symptoms. Postpartum depression was found among 23.4% of women. These rates are about double those found for middle-class samples. Particularly heightened risk for antepartum depression was found among single women who did not have a cohabiting partner. African American and European American women did not differ in rates of depression. Antepartum depression was a weak but significant risk factor for postpartum depression.


Journal of Community Psychology | 1993

Resource conservation as a strategy for community psychology

Stevan E. Hobfoll; Roy S. Lilly

Conservation of resources (COR) theory (Hobfoll, 1988, 1989) was applied to social intervention and research. COR theory depicts resource loss as disproportionately weighted in comparison to resource gain. COR theory further posits that to prevent resource loss or establish resources, other resources must be invested. Resources contribute to further resource gain, whereas lack of resources contributes to ongoing resource loss. Consequently, people, groups, or organizations that are endowed with strong personal or social resource reserves should better resist the deleterious effects of stress and withstand everyday challenges. One of the basic principles of the theory—that loss is disproportionately weighted compared to gain—was tested in two samples and strongly supported. Implications of the model for intervention were discussed.


American Journal of Community Psychology | 1994

Gender and coping: The dual-axis model of coping

Stevan E. Hobfoll; Carla L. Dunahoo; Yossef S. Ben-Porath; Jeannine Monnier

Examined a dual-axis model of coping that included both action (active vs. passive) and social dimensions (prosocial vs. antisocial) of coping strategies among a combined sample of students and community residents. We developed an assessment device to represent the model and allow investigation. Mixed support for the model and instrument were noted. Women were more prosocial than men in their coping, but no less active. Men were more likely to use antisocial and aggressive, but less assertive coping strategies than women. More prosocial, action coping strategies were also more likely to be related to greater sense of mastery and more liberal gender-role orientation. Antisocial and passive strategies tended to be related to lower mastery and more traditional gender-role orientation. Active coping was related to lower emotional distress for men and women, but both prosocial and antisocial coping were related to greater emotional distress for men, suggesting that men may have a narrower band of beneficial coping strategies than do women.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2006

Exposure to terrorism, stress-related mental health symptoms, and defensive coping among Jews and Arabs in Israel.

Stevan E. Hobfoll; Daphna Canetti-Nisim; Regina Jones Johnson

The authors conducted a large-scale study of terrorism in Israel via telephone surveys in September 2003 with 905 adult Jewish and Palestinian citizens of Israel (PCIs). Structural equation path modeling indicated that exposure to terrorism was significantly related to greater loss and gain of psychosocial resources and to greater posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depressive symptoms. Psychosocial resource loss and gain associated with terrorism were, in turn, significantly related to both greater PTSD and depressive symptoms. PCIs had significantly higher levels of PTSD and depressive symptoms than Jews. Further, PTSD symptoms in particular were related to greater authoritarian beliefs and ethnocentrism, suggesting how PTSD may lead to a self-protective style of defensive coping.

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