Bernardo Allan B I, Mateo Nino Jose, Dela Cruz Isaiah C
Department of Psychology, De La Salle University, 2401 Taft Avenue, 1004 Manila, Philippines.
Psychol Stud (Mysore). 2022;67(3):273-280. doi: 10.1007/s12646-022-00676-5. Epub 2022 Aug 23.
Research and publications on the psychology of well-being have steadily increased in recent decades, but research on the peoples of South Asian and Southeast Asian is quite underrepresented in the research literature. Even as people from the regions comprise one third of the current global population, studies on well-being of individuals and groups from countries in the two regions are disproportionately fewer compared to other countries and regions. The special issue is a modest attempt to call attention to this underrepresentation, and to individuals and groups that are in the margins of these societies. The special issue features 11 empirical studies focused on well-being of people who either face economic hardships, have low-status occupations, experience discrimination due to gender, or experience physical disabilities. The studies highlight how well-being can be conceptualized as an adaptive process, which involves finding meaning and coping and drawing from one's agency and resources. The studies in the special, while limited in scope, will hopefully serve as catalyst for further research on the psychology of well-being in the two regions in ways that will enrich global theory and research.
近几十年来,关于幸福心理学的研究和出版物稳步增加,但南亚和东南亚地区人民的相关研究在研究文献中所占比例相当低。尽管来自这些地区的人口占当前全球人口的三分之一,但与其他国家和地区相比,对这两个地区国家的个人和群体幸福感的研究却少得不成比例。本期特刊是一次小小的尝试,旨在引起人们对这种代表性不足的关注,以及对处于这些社会边缘的个人和群体的关注。本期特刊发表了11项实证研究,重点关注那些面临经济困难、从事低地位职业、因性别而遭受歧视或有身体残疾的人的幸福感。这些研究强调了幸福感如何被概念化为一个适应过程,这个过程涉及到寻找意义、应对困难以及利用个人的能动性和资源。本期特刊中的研究虽然范围有限,但有望成为推动这两个地区幸福心理学进一步研究的催化剂,从而丰富全球理论和研究。