Foreword |
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ix | |
Author's introduction |
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xi | |
Acknowledgements |
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xix | |
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1 Resilience: where did it come from? Research on resilience and its use in nursing |
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1 | (14) |
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Origins of research into resilience: psychoanalysis and trauma |
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2 | (3) |
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A debate develops: can resilience be grown? |
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5 | (3) |
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Four waves of resilience research? |
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8 | (1) |
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9 | (6) |
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2 The limits of resilience: introducing `critical resilience' |
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15 | (20) |
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Resilience as wish fulfilment |
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16 | (2) |
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Resilience and `responsibilization' |
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18 | (2) |
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The focus of resilience is individualistic |
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20 | (3) |
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Critiques of resilience from radical social justice |
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23 | (1) |
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Is the argument for resilience circular? |
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24 | (3) |
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So is resilience any use? |
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27 | (1) |
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Help, why shouldn't I build up resilience? |
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27 | (2) |
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It's decision time: what are the alternatives? |
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29 | (1) |
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An alternative: critical resilience |
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29 | (2) |
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What is critique and how is it different from `criticism' or `complaint'? |
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31 | (4) |
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3 How compassionate are you? |
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35 | (20) |
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36 | (7) |
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What happens to nurses who care? |
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43 | (4) |
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When good people do bad things |
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47 | (1) |
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Compassion, empathy and alternatives |
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48 | (7) |
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4 Nursing work is difficult work and what to do about it |
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55 | (14) |
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57 | (2) |
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59 | (5) |
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64 | (3) |
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What might resilience mean? Supervision and peer-support |
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67 | (2) |
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5 Nursing: whose idea was it anyway? |
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69 | (14) |
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At last -- an occupation for respectable women |
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70 | (1) |
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Are we better off like doctors or not? |
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71 | (1) |
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Nursing after the Second World War |
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72 | (1) |
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`We need to do something about nursing': modernizing and more |
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73 | (3) |
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76 | (1) |
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What's next? Nurses in debt and another new worker |
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77 | (4) |
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81 | (2) |
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6 Politicians: part of the solution and part of the problem |
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83 | (18) |
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Are politicians to be trusted? |
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83 | (2) |
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85 | (2) |
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87 | (2) |
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89 | (1) |
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90 | (1) |
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Neoliberalism and the market |
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91 | (2) |
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Policy examples: the creation of a welfare state in the UK |
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93 | (1) |
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94 | (2) |
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Professions are the problem: nursing as a policy instrument |
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96 | (2) |
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Post-Francis, post-everything |
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98 | (1) |
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99 | (2) |
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7 Being a student, being a worker |
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101 | (16) |
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Pros and cons of being in the university |
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102 | (2) |
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Structural forces on university nursing |
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104 | (4) |
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How the NHS workplace works |
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108 | (3) |
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What to do about bullying at work or at college |
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111 | (2) |
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113 | (4) |
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8 Critical resilience and critical theory |
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117 | (14) |
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What was there before theory? |
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118 | (1) |
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119 | (5) |
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124 | (2) |
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Critiques of Marxism Other critiques: the Enlightenment and critique, Nietzsche and Foucault |
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126 | (2) |
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Where and how to find out more |
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128 | (1) |
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So, what does this mean for me? |
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128 | (3) |
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9 Nursing solidarity, organizing and resistance |
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131 | (10) |
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Radical nurses past and present |
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132 | (2) |
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Nursing unions and their achievements |
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134 | (2) |
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Social media and activism |
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136 | (2) |
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138 | (1) |
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Nurses of all countries unite: no nurse need be alone |
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139 | (2) |
Appendix: Summary of research papers on resilience in nursing included in this book |
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141 | (8) |
References |
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149 | (14) |
Index |
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163 | |