Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) W.M. Marcellino , Frank Tortorello
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) The RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, USA, USMC/ProSol LLC, MCB Quantico, VA, USA
ANO 2015
TIPO Article
PERIÓDICO Armed Forces and Society
ISSN 0095-327X
E-ISSN 1556-0848
EDITORA SAGE Publications
DOI 10.1177/0095327x14536709
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 da359b23c30ae5ecdae533ca83f1e641
FORMATO PDF

Resumo

Ethnographic research among US Marines shows resilience is in their practices, not biology. Empirical evidence supports our claim that a personal-social understanding of resilience has superior explanatory power and plausibility over mechanistic and reductive frameworks that treat resilience as automated functions of human biopsychological systems. Marines dynamically pursue their values in context, and this resilience can only be defined in local, variable context, not globally and generally. USMC resilience training should focus on skills and concepts needed to resolve challenges to values in the lives of Marines. Technical-medical interventions should be reserved for clinical populations.

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