Resilience

Front Cover
Allen & Unwin, 2003 - 296 pages
This work explores resilience, one of the most important and intriguing characteristics affecting human wellbeing. In western societies scant attention has been paid to exploring how and why some people and some communities are better able to cope with adversity and risk than others. Anne Deveson addresses the nature of resilience, whether it can be learned, its many components, what inhibits resilience and why some people/communities are more resilient than others. individuals and groups of people to feel they can cope, to encourage a different ethos amongst the shapers of law and policy, and to encourage the establishment of programmes to develop resiliency models for young people.

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About the author (2003)

Anne Deveson was born in Kuala Lumpur, Malaya on June 19, 1930. During World War II, her family was evacuated from Great Britain to Malaya and then Australia as refugees. After a brief return to London, she moved back to Australia in 1956. She was a journalist, author, and social commentator. She wrote three memoirs Resilience, Tell Me I'm Here, and Waging Peace: Reflections on Peace and War from an Unconventional Woman. Tell Me I'm Here is the story of her son Jonathan's experience of living with schizophrenia and his eventual death of a drug overdose. The book was later made into a documentary entitled Spinning Out. Deveson became an advocate for mental health awareness and helped establish Schizophrenia Australia. She was made a Member of the Order of Australia for service to the media in 1983 and an Officer of the Order of Australia for service to community health in 1993. She was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2014. She died on December 12, 2016 at the age of 86.

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