Title: Psychopolitical Validity: Working with Power to Promote Justice and WellBeing
1Psychopolitical ValidityWorking with Power to
Promote Justice and Well-Being
- Isaac Prilleltensky_at_Vanderbilt.Edu
- First International Conference on Community
Psychology Puerto Rico - http//people.vanderbilt.edu/isaac.prilleltensky
2- We cannot explain the development of
individuality or subjectivity apart from its
social context. But neither can we formulate a
social theory to explain the dynamics of
oppression without considering its psychic
dimension. We need a theory that operates between
the psyche and the social (Oliver, 2004, The
Colonization of Psychic Space).
3Elements of a Social Theory of Justice and
Well-Being
- Link between the political and the psychological
- Link between values and interests
- Link between the epistemic and the ethical
domains - Power as a central component of links 1, 2, and 3
above
4Epistemic Dialectic
5Ethical Dialectic
Ethical dialectic
6Power at the intersection of epistemic and
ethical dialectics
Ethical dialectic
7Elements of Well-Being and Justice
- Well-Being consists of the synergy of
- Personal
- Relational
- Collective domains
- Justice consists of contextual considerations of
- Needs
- Merit
- Equality
8The Synergy of Well-being
- There cannot be well-being but in the combined
presence of personal, relational, and collective
well-being
relational
W
personal
collective
9Complementary Principles of Justice
10The Role of Context in Justice
- The principle chosen depends on the
circumstances - If equality prevails, merit and effort are
rational choices. - If inequality prevails, needs and equality take
precedence - Among citizens, certain needs matter from the
point of view of justice because if they are not
met, the equal status of some citizens is put at
risk (Miller, 1999, p. 32).
11Justice Out of Context
- Societies aspiring to justice must seek
equilibrium among needs, merit, and equality. - When context of inequality calls for need and
equality, but culture favors merit, its because
privileged groups benefit. - As a result, group interests that influence the
choice of allocation pattern often disregard the
context-specific situation.
12Well-Being ?? Justice
13Elements of a Theory of Power
- 1. Power refers to the capacity and opportunity
to fulfil or obstruct personal, relational, or
collective needs. - 2. Power has psychological and political sources,
manifestations and consequences. - 3. We can distinguish among power to strive for
wellness, power to oppress, and power to resist
oppression and strive for liberation. - 4. Power can be overt or covert, subtle or
blatant, hidden or exposed.
14- 5. The exercise of power can apply to self,
others, and collectives. - 6. Power affords people multiple identities as
individuals seeking wellness, engaging in
oppression, or resisting domination. - 7. Whereas people may be oppressed in one
context, at a particular time and place, they may
act as oppressors at another time and place.
15- 8. Due to structural factors such as social
class, gender, ability, and race, people may
enjoy differential levels of power. - 9. Degrees of power are also affected by personal
and social constructs such as beauty,
intelligence, and assertiveness constructs that
enjoy variable status within different cultures. - 10. The exercise of power can reflect varying
degrees of awareness with respect to the impact
of one's actions.
16Elements of a Theory of Psychopolitical Validity
- Psychopolitical validity derives from the
consideration of power dynamics in psychological
and political domains of wellness. - The main objective of psychopolitical validity is
to infuse in community psychology an awareness of
the role of power in wellness, oppression, and
liberation at the personal, relational, and
collective domains.
17Psychopolitical validity
- In order to attain psychopolitical validity,
investigations and interventions would have to
meet certain criteria. These criteria have to do
with the extent to which research and action
incorporate lessons about psychological and
political power.
18Psychopolitical Validity I Epistemic
- This type of validity is achieved by the
systematic account of the role of power in
political and psychological dynamics affecting
phenomena of interest - Such account needs to consider the role of power
in the psychology and politics of wellness,
oppression and liberation, at the personal,
relational, and collective domains.
19Table 1 Guidelines for Epistemic Psychopolitical
Validity in Community Psychology
20Psychopolitical Validity II Transformational
- Transformational validity derives from the
potential of our actions to promote personal,
relational, and collective wellness by reducing
power inequalities and increasing political
action
21Table 2 Guidelines for Transformational
Psychopolitical Validity
22Project I New SPECs Three-Year Action Research
Project
John Snow Foundation
Island Youth Center
Healthy City
Nazareth Center
MLK Center
23- Building on Strengths
- Focusing on Prevention
- Working to Empower
- Changing Community Conditions
24Project II Vision Implementation ProjectThree
year research and action project with large
government department of human services
- Vision
- Implementation
- Project
- Clarifying and moving the vision forward
- Implementing vision through communities of
practice - Building the proper systems for learning and
growth
25(No Transcript)
26How Power Operates in Health and Human Services?
- Political power and psychological power interact
in multiple ways - Political and psychological power influence
values and interests of players in the health and
human service arena - The more power equalization within the
organization, the higher the chances that the
intervention will be transformative - Some aspects, like Strengths and Prevention, are
easier to implement and less threatening but less
transformative than Empowerment and Changing
community conditions - Contradictory discourses about power abound in
the discourse of participants in both projects
27Epistemic Dialectic
28Ethical Dialectic
Ethical dialectic
29Power at the intersection of epistemic and
ethical dialectics
Ethical dialectic
30Stokols says.
- The healthfulness of a situation and the
well-being of its participants are assumed to be
influenced by multiple facets of both the
physical environment (e.g., geography,
architecture, and technology) and the social
environment (e.g., culture, economics, and
politics). Moreover, the health status of
individuals and groups is influenced not only by
environmental factors but also by a variety of
personal attributes, including genetic heritage,
psychological dispositions, and behavioral
patterns.
31Stokols continues..
- Thus, efforts to promote human well-being should
be based on an understanding of the dynamic
interplay among diverse environmental and
personal factors rather than on analyses that
focus exclusively on environmental, biological,
or behavioral factors. (Stokols, 2000, p. 27)
32Seligman says
- Seligman tells readers that, even if you could
alter all of the external circumstances above, it
would not do much for you, since together they
probably account for no more than between 8 and
15 percent of the variance in happiness
(Authentic Happiness, 2002, p. 61). - Really?
33Seligman Engages in Context Minimization Error
- Tendency to ignore the impact of enduring
neighborhood and community contexts on human
behavior. The error has adverse consequences for
understanding psychological processes and efforts
at social change (Shinn and Toohey, 2003, p.
428).
34Context Minimization Error
- Practitioners should pay more attention to the
community contexts of human behavior. Conditions
in neighborhoods and community settings are
associated with residents' mental and physical
health, opportunities, satisfactions, and
commitments. (Shinn and Toohey, 2003, Annual
Review of Psychology).
35Its like Venice..
36Venices Lesson
- The psychotherapist, social worker or social
reformer, concerned only with his own clients and
their grievance against society, perhaps takes a
view comparable to the private citizen of Venice
who concerns himself only with the safety of his
own dwelling and his own ability to get about the
city. But if the entire republic is slowly being
submerged, individual citizens cannot afford to
ignore their collective fate, because, in the
end, they all drown together if nothing is done
(Badcock, 1982)