Homo Oeconomicus at the Café: A Field Experiment on 'Suspended Coffee
In: Euricse Working Papers No. 111
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In: Euricse Working Papers No. 111
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Working paper
Il contributo utilizza la critica che l"economia femminista ha mosso all"homo oeco-nomicus per presentare le più recenti visioni dello sviluppo, del benessere e della felici-tà. Questi ultimi vengono, pertanto, analizzati in una nuova prospettiva che tiene contodi aspetti quali: i beni relazionali, la responsabilità sociale, il valore della cura, della col-laborazione e del rispetto reciproco. A tal proposito, vengono presentati alcuni innovati-vi indici di sviluppo già adottati da vari Paesi volti a indirizzarne le proprie politiche e-conomiche e sociali verso la promozione del benessere dei propri cittadini.
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Cite as: Di Martino, S., Eiroa-Orosa, F. J., & Arcidiacono, C. (2017). Community Psychology's Contributions on Happiness and Well-being: Including the Role of Context, Social Justice, and Values in Our Understanding of the Good Life. In N. J. L. Brown, T. Lomas, & F. J. Eiroa-Orosa (Eds.), The Routledge International Handbook of Critical Positive Psychology (pp. 99–118). London, UK: Routledge. ; Francisco José Eiroa-Orosa has received funding from the European Union's Framework Programme for Research and Innovation Horizon 2020 (2014–2020) under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No 654808.
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In: Action research, Band 14, Heft 4, S. 376-392
ISSN: 1741-2617
This article describes the use of participatory visual and multimedia methods as part of a participatory action research carried out in a highly degraded urban area of a metropolis. The project was developed by the 'I love Portacapuana' committee in collaboration with community psychology lab and 180 undergraduate psychology students of the University of Naples Federico II. The joint use of visual tools such as photographs and videos with Internet-based collaborative work groups – through social networks such as Facebook – has proved effective in interpreting the needs of local citizens. This process has also involved a thorough analysis in terms of strengths and weaknesses as well as opportunities and threats in the local context. Indeed, the integration of visual tools into the broader framework of community diagnosis has fostered an interactive dialogue between the local community, researchers and local authorities. This, in turn, has lead to the outlining of a series of intervention strategies for local urban regeneration.
In: Futures, Band 78-79, S. 47-56
In: Futures: the journal of policy, planning and futures studies, Band 78-79, S. 47-56
ISSN: 0016-3287
In: Families, relationships and societies: an international journal of research and debate, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 181-197
ISSN: 2046-7443
Digital technologies play an increasing role in intimate couple relationships, prompting new approaches to better understand the contemporary digital relationship landscape. This article uses feminist new materialist assemblage thinking to explore the functioning and processes of a relationship support app, Paired. Deploying diffractive analysis, it presents three composite narratives that explore the temporality of couple relationships, relationship work and situated practices of coupledom. Composite narratives retain the emotional truth of original accounts through combined participant voices, enabling attention to be focused on the user–relationship–app assemblage. Findings suggest that routinised app notifications prompt meaningful everyday relationship maintenance behaviours. Human–technology intra-actions thus generate positive relationship health and wellbeing behaviours which may have lasting benefits. This article's contributions are therefore largely methodological and conceptual, with analysis of supplementary primary interview data (n=20) derived from a mixed-methods evaluation, including brief longitudinal surveys over three months (n=440) and a detailed survey (n=745).
In: Journal of family theory & review: JFTR, Band 15, Heft 4, S. 685-705
ISSN: 1756-2589
AbstractLong‐established studies and scales have advanced understandings of family function, marital satisfaction, and couple relationship quality. The underpinning constructs nevertheless remain under‐conceptualized and largely removed from the heuristic of everyday life and the dynamic of contemporary coupledom. We propose that a paradigm shift is required to sufficiently engage with the digital worlds of 21st century intimacies. Ideas in feminist new materialism revitalize the epistemology and ontology of relationship science. This enables a new look at how relationship quality is manifest in and created through human–technology intra–actions. The research tools of feminist new materialism are, however, typically creative and intentionally exploratory. We demonstrate how using a practices approach, which focuses on everyday lived experience, facilitates investigation of multidimensional public–private worlds. We deploy this to build a feminist new materialist analysis of a digital couple intervention. Through this, we develop the concept of more–than–relationship quality.