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Handbook of Social Resource Theory

by Törnblom, Kjell.
Authors: Kazemi, Ali.%editor. | SpringerLink (Online service) Series: Critical Issues in Social Justice, 1572-1906 Physical details: XXII, 470 p. 27 illus. online resource. ISBN: 1461441757 Subject(s): Social sciences. | Quality of Life. | Social policy. | Quality of Life %Research. | Consciousness. | Social Sciences. | Sociology, general. | Social Policy. | Quality of Life Research. | Personality and Social Psychology.
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I: Introdocution -- Historical Overview and Foa’s Original Statement -- Resource Theory of Social Exchange -- II: Conceptual Developments and Theoretical Integrations -- Theoretical and Conceptual Developments -- Goods, Bads, and the Foa Resources -- Donating Blood is not the Same as Donating Money -- Resources and Social Dilemmas -- Integrating Social Resource, Distributive Justice, and Procedural Justice Theories -- Predicting Reactions to Injustice via Integration Between Resource Type and Procedural Rule -- Understanding the Exchange in Social Exchange Theory -- Moral Resources -- Resources, Exchange, and Emotional Stratification -- III: Organizational, Institutional, Societal, and Intercultural Issues -- Loss and Acquisition of Social Resources -- Resources and Transations in the Organization’s Underworld -- Interpersonal Behavior as Resource Exchange -- Do Type of Resource and the Magnitude of Negative Resource Valence Affect Pereptions of Allocation Outcome and Procedure -- Resource Differentiation and Preferences for Distribution Principles -- IV: The Impact of Resource Type on Justice Conceptions -- Choice of Justice Principles and Salience of Outcome vs. Procedure -- At the Receiving end in Social Relationships -- What is Restored in Restorative Justice -- Revisiting the Symbolic-Concrete Distrinction of Resource Theory -- Evaluating the Distribution of Various Resources in Educational Settings -- V: Other Social Resource Frameworks -- The Positive, Sustaining, and Protective Power of Resources -- Social Resources and Structural Principles of Distributive Justice -- VI: Methodological Issues -- Applying the Factorial Survey Technique in the Context of Social Resource Theory -- A Facet Analysis Approach in Research on Social Resource Theory -- Common Strategies and Emerging Methodological Challenges in the Study of Social Resources -- Where do we Stand and Where do we Want to go?.  .

Our lives as human beings are characterized by production and use of social resources, material (e.g., money and physical possessions) as well as immaterial (such as love, knowledge, and power). Distribution and exchange of these resources are central to individuals’ physical and mental health and quality of life.  Over the past four decades, Social Resource Theory (SRT) has evolved to build vital links between social psychology and public policy, providing a valuable lens for understanding and addressing social class, inequality, and injustice. The recent conceptual and theoretical developments and future prospects of this robust field are on full display in this Handbook of Social Resource Theory. An international, interdisciplinary panel of experts expands on the pioneering work of the late Dr. Uriel Foa and his wife Edna Foa, starting with the basic structure of SRT. The handbook includes integrations of SRT with other social scientific frameworks, analyses of organizational and cultural issues, reports of empirical research using various methods, as well as applications to different areas including: Social justice. Quality of life. Interpersonal relationships. Social dilemmas. Stress management. Work satisfaction. Cognitive development. Consumer behavior. Cross-cultural behavior. Covering human social transactions from the interpersonal to the intercultural levels, the Handbook of Social Resource Theory extends this relevant line of study to enhance the work of social psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists, political scientists, and public policy makers. The Handbook presents the basic tenets of the social resource theory originated from the late Uriel Foa and provides an authoritative agenda for the future developments of this theory. Kjell Törnblom and Ali Kazemi have made an excellent job in gathering a global group of contributing scholars representing an outstanding mix of respected and long-standing researchers in social psychology, sociology, psychology, management, economics and marketing, political science, history, and applied ethics/philosophy. This Handbook is an ideal resource for researchers, instructors, and graduate students in all these fields with an interest in social resource theory.”   Edna B. Foa Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Pennsylvania     “Uriel Foa (1916-1990) developed social resource theory in the 1960s.  In the next half century this theory has generated an enormous amount of new data and theory in social, cross-cultural, and educational psychology, as well as in related disciplines. It has inspired work on interpersonal relationships, attributions, the understanding of status, morality, distributive justice, procedural justice, social dilemmas, interpersonal evaluation, biosocial theory, and action construal. Applications in both organizational and educational settings and in marketing studies indicate the theory’s relevance for the “real world.” This volume edited by Kjell Törnblom and Ali Kazemi is the wonderful Festschrift that Foa did not have, because he died when he was too young by contemporary life expectancy standards. It includes chapters by many of the stars of the fields that social resource theory has influenced.”   Harry C. Triandis Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois       “Forty years ago Edna and Uriel Foa began to spell out the unwritten social rules by which we trade – on a daily basis – friendship, information, respect, gifts, favors and other rewards and punishments. Sociologists, psychologists, economists, and others owe the editors a tremendous debt of gratitude for reminding us of the eloquence and indispensability of the original work on social resource theory and for bringing together a distinguished roster of scholars and scientists to reflect on the theory and to exercise it in the service of addressing an astonishing number and variety of important social and organizational problems.” John T. Jost Professor of Psychology and Politics, New York University     “What material and symbolic goods count as resources? How do resources relate to power? How can the exchange and distribution of resources be understood in both interpersonal and societal terms? In this outstanding volume, Törnblom and Kazemi bring together a constellation of experts from a variety of disciplines to address questions such as these. Taking as their basis the classic statement by Uriel and Edna Foa of the resource theory of social exchange, the Handbook moves through theoretical to practical analyses and presents both laboratory and field research conducted in a number of different countries. The book makes an excellent contribution to our understanding of social exchange theory in particular and of social relationships in general. The collection is both impressive and important.” Faye J Crosby Professor of Psychology, University of California Santa Cruz       “A tour de force, this comprehensive volume presents cutting edge insights inspired by Foa and Foa’s social resource theory. Törnblom and Kazemi have brought together a stellar cast to address ageless questions about the cornerstones of social life and provide generative roadmaps for future theorizing and research. This volume is a rich resource for scholars as well as students and educated readers who want to know more about the complexities of social life.”   Linda J. Skitka Professor of Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago

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