First Page
85
Last Page
118
Abstract
"The voices of the poor confirmed a common recommendation among scholars to combine the best of person-focused approaches with the best of variable-focused approaches in resilience studies. This could be especially beneficial for comparative studies in terms of religion and culture adherence. In other words, I am considering to slightly tweak my research topic and widen the scope towards a comparative religious study within the same environment and to specify the impact of comparative faith traditions on the human development context in displacement. Finally, my better understanding of the nature of family resilience awakened my curiosity for discovering the nature of resilience in people from both Christian and non-Christian faith traditions."
Recommended Citation
Rimarzik, Regine
(2017)
"Family Resilience in Displacement: Defining Validity and Reliability in a Hermeneutic Phenomenology Inquiry,"
Journal of Adventist Mission Studies:
Vol. 13:
No.
2, 85-118.
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.32597/jams/vol13/iss2/10/
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/jams/vol13/iss2/10
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.32597/jams/vol13/iss2/10/
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Christianity Commons, East Asian Languages and Societies Commons, Missions and World Christianity Commons, Practical Theology Commons