Title
Cultivating Connection: A Conceptual Model Identifying Facilitating and Inhibiting Factors across Three Levels of Community
Document Type
Thesis or dissertation
Date of this Version
2019
Abstract
In a world that is more virtually connected than ever before, social connection is waning at an alarming rate. Extensive research has demonstrated the importance of individuals’ connection to others, and community, as central for holistic well-being. In this paper, I build a bridge between positive psychology and community psychology. I introduce a recipe for authentic human connection (AHC) and present a 3x3x3 conceptual model that explores how AHC shows up at three levels of community: micro-communities of dyads and families, meso-communities of workplaces and schools, and macro-communities of neighborhoods, cities, and countries. For each level of community, I identify facilitating factors for AHC. These include eye contact, listening, virtue, psychological safety, psychological capital, play, social capital, ritual, and sense of place. I also explore inhibiting factors for AHC such as unconscious bias, fear, social and cultural norms, power structures, competition, instability, inequality, mistrust, and physical environment. Drawing on the rich resource of positive psychology, I close my paper by presenting three strategies for individuals to cultivate authentic human connection across all levels of community.
Keywords
conceptual model, authentic human connection, community connection, inhibiting factors, facilitating factors
Topic
Relationships, Well-being/Flourishing
Format
Literature Review
Date Posted: 30 October 2019