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Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis

This research presents an interdisciplinary critical interpretive synthesis examining the constructs of occupation and resilience and how they are related. The construct of resilience, which is concerned with how people respond to adversity, has the potential to guide the development of more sociall...

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Main Author: Van Veenendaal, Julie Anne
Other Authors: Sonday, Amshuda
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Occupational Therapy 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Van Veenendaal, Julie Anne
author2 Sonday, Amshuda
author_browse Sonday, Amshuda
Van Veenendaal, Julie Anne
author_facet Sonday, Amshuda
Van Veenendaal, Julie Anne
author_sort Van Veenendaal, Julie Anne
collection Thesis
description This research presents an interdisciplinary critical interpretive synthesis examining the constructs of occupation and resilience and how they are related. The construct of resilience, which is concerned with how people respond to adversity, has the potential to guide the development of more socially transformative praxis in both occupational therapy and occupational science. As theory and theorisation are the foundation of praxis, for resilience to be useful in the development of socially transformative praxis the theoretical relationship between resilience and occupation needs to be clarified. Aim: The aim of this research was to critically explore and synthesise theoretical relationships between the construct of occupation and socio-ecological understandings of resilience. Methodology: Given that resilience has been studied across many disciplines, and, that the study of occupation requires interdisciplinarity, this research was positioned within an interdisciplinary paradigm. The interpretive review methodology of critical interpretive synthesis was chosen as it is consistent with an interdisciplinary paradigm, adopts a critically reflexive stance, and can be used for the examination, synthesis, and generation of theory. Occupation and resilience were first examined as separate constructs before theory on the relationship between occupation and resilience was developed. Through a hermeneutic and iterative process, a total of 131 papers were included in the review. Sixty-three of these papers were on occupation and 68 on resilience. Patterns of meaning including key concepts, relationships between concepts and critiques of current theory were analysed through a process of thematic analysis, data abstraction and memo writing. Insights from this process and interviews with subject matter experts formed the basis of theorisation about the relationship between occupation and resilience. Findings: Occupation and resilience are best understood as overlapping constructs that describe everyday processes. Occupation describes what people do as the point of intersection between people, space, and time. As a concept, occupation can either be used as a noun to refer to specific things people do, or as a verb to refer to process of being occupied. Resilience is an overarching concept that includes understandings of available capacity, divergent processes and what people consider to be positive outcomes. Moreover, resilience can be understood as a pattern of occupational engagement that unfolds over time. As occupation is the mechanism for resilience, understanding occupation is key to understanding resilience. Conclusion: Understanding the relationship between occupation and resilience creates unique opportunities for the development of socially transformative praxis, not only within occupational therapy and occupational science, but throughout resilience studies
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:38:40.938Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Division of Occupational Therapy
publisherStr Division of Occupational Therapy
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41211 Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis Van Veenendaal, Julie Anne Sonday, Amshuda Williams, Elvin Occupational Therapy This research presents an interdisciplinary critical interpretive synthesis examining the constructs of occupation and resilience and how they are related. The construct of resilience, which is concerned with how people respond to adversity, has the potential to guide the development of more socially transformative praxis in both occupational therapy and occupational science. As theory and theorisation are the foundation of praxis, for resilience to be useful in the development of socially transformative praxis the theoretical relationship between resilience and occupation needs to be clarified. Aim: The aim of this research was to critically explore and synthesise theoretical relationships between the construct of occupation and socio-ecological understandings of resilience. Methodology: Given that resilience has been studied across many disciplines, and, that the study of occupation requires interdisciplinarity, this research was positioned within an interdisciplinary paradigm. The interpretive review methodology of critical interpretive synthesis was chosen as it is consistent with an interdisciplinary paradigm, adopts a critically reflexive stance, and can be used for the examination, synthesis, and generation of theory. Occupation and resilience were first examined as separate constructs before theory on the relationship between occupation and resilience was developed. Through a hermeneutic and iterative process, a total of 131 papers were included in the review. Sixty-three of these papers were on occupation and 68 on resilience. Patterns of meaning including key concepts, relationships between concepts and critiques of current theory were analysed through a process of thematic analysis, data abstraction and memo writing. Insights from this process and interviews with subject matter experts formed the basis of theorisation about the relationship between occupation and resilience. Findings: Occupation and resilience are best understood as overlapping constructs that describe everyday processes. Occupation describes what people do as the point of intersection between people, space, and time. As a concept, occupation can either be used as a noun to refer to specific things people do, or as a verb to refer to process of being occupied. Resilience is an overarching concept that includes understandings of available capacity, divergent processes and what people consider to be positive outcomes. Moreover, resilience can be understood as a pattern of occupational engagement that unfolds over time. As occupation is the mechanism for resilience, understanding occupation is key to understanding resilience. Conclusion: Understanding the relationship between occupation and resilience creates unique opportunities for the development of socially transformative praxis, not only within occupational therapy and occupational science, but throughout resilience studies 2025-03-19T11:31:30Z 2025-03-19T11:31:30Z 2024 2025-03-19T11:30:29Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41211 eng application/pdf Division of Occupational Therapy Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Occupational Therapy
Van Veenendaal, Julie Anne
Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis
title_full Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis
title_fullStr Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis
title_short Occupation and Resilience: An Interdisciplinary Critical Interpretive Synthesis
title_sort occupation and resilience an interdisciplinary critical interpretive synthesis
topic Occupational Therapy
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41211
work_keys_str_mv AT vanveenendaaljulieanne occupationandresilienceaninterdisciplinarycriticalinterpretivesynthesis