Transforming Social Regularities in a Multicomponent Community‐Based Intervention: A Case Study of Professionals’ Adaptability to Better Support Parents to Meet Their Children's Needs

This paper presents an in‐depth case study of the dynamic processes of mutual adjustment that occurred between two professional teams participating in a multicomponent community‐based intervention (CBI). Drawing on the concept of social regularities, we focus on patterns of social interaction within...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of community psychology 2017-06, Vol.59 (3-4), p.316-332
Hauptverfasser: Quiroz Saavedra, Rodrigo, Brunson, Liesette, Bigras, Nathalie
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container_title American journal of community psychology
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creator Quiroz Saavedra, Rodrigo
Brunson, Liesette
Bigras, Nathalie
description This paper presents an in‐depth case study of the dynamic processes of mutual adjustment that occurred between two professional teams participating in a multicomponent community‐based intervention (CBI). Drawing on the concept of social regularities, we focus on patterns of social interaction within and across the two microsystems involved in delivering the intervention. Two research strategies, narrative analysis and structural network analysis, were used to reveal the social regularities linking the two microsystems. Results document strategies and actions undertaken by the professionals responsible for the intervention to modify intersetting social regularities to deal with a problem situation that arose during the course of one intervention cycle. The results illustrate how key social regularities were modified in order to resolve the problem situation and allow the intervention to continue to function smoothly. We propose that these changes represent a transition to a new state of the ecological intervention system. This transformation appeared to be the result of certain key intervening mechanisms: changing key role relationships, boundary spanning, and synergy. The transformation also appeared to be linked to positive setting‐level and individual‐level outcomes: confidence of key team members, joint planning, decision‐making and intervention activities, and the achievement of desired intervention objectives. Highlights Transformation of social regularities linking two microsystems are revealed. Changes in social regularities are a transition to a new state of the ecological intervention system. Three mechanisms are proposed to explain the transformation of these social regularities.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ajcp.12145
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The transformation also appeared to be linked to positive setting‐level and individual‐level outcomes: confidence of key team members, joint planning, decision‐making and intervention activities, and the achievement of desired intervention objectives. Highlights Transformation of social regularities linking two microsystems are revealed. Changes in social regularities are a transition to a new state of the ecological intervention system. Three mechanisms are proposed to explain the transformation of these social regularities.</abstract><cop>England</cop><pub>Blackwell Science Ltd</pub><pmid>28580598</pmid><doi>10.1002/ajcp.12145</doi><tpages>17</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source Wiley-Blackwell Journals; MEDLINE; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Case reports
Case studies
Child
Child Abuse - prevention & control
Child Abuse - rehabilitation
Child welfare
Child, Preschool
Children
Children & youth
Community Mental Health Services - methods
Community-Institutional Relations
Community‐based interventions
Decision making
Environmental aspects
Female
Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Intervention
Interviews as Topic
Male
Mutual adjustment processes
Network analysis
Organizational Case Studies
Parent-Child Relations
Parents & parenting
Parents - psychology
Partnerships
Professional-Patient Relations
Psychology, Social - methods
Quebec
Settings theory
Social interaction
Social regularities
Social services
Social Support
Social Work - methods
title Transforming Social Regularities in a Multicomponent Community‐Based Intervention: A Case Study of Professionals’ Adaptability to Better Support Parents to Meet Their Children's Needs
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