Life Demands (life + demand)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Amenities Drive Urban Growth

JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, Issue 5 2002
Terry Nichols Clark
Studies of the city traditionally posit a division between a city's economy and its culture, with culture subordinate in explanatory power to work. However, post,industrial and globalizing trends are dramatically elevating the importance of culture. Cultural activities are increasingly crucial to urban economic vitality. Models to explain the growth of cities from the era of industrial manufacturing are outmoded. Citizens in the postindustrial city increasingly make quality of life demands, treating their own urban location as if tourists, emphasizing aesthetic concerns. These practices impact considerations about the proper nature of amenities that post,industrial cities can sustain. [source]


Rethinking the Work,Life Interface: It's Not about Balance, It's about Resource Allocation

APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY: HEALTH AND WELL-BEING, Issue 2 2010
Matthew J. Grawitch
This article re-conceptualises the framework surrounding work,life balance. Though previous research has focused primarily on the ways in which work life and non-work life influence each other (mostly negatively), we present an alternative perspective that focuses on personal pursuits and the management of personal resources. We introduce a personal resource allocation (PRA) framework that treats all life demands,whether preferred or required,as forcing individuals to make choices about where, when, and how they expend their personal resources across the life domain. Building on self-regulatory theories, such as control theory, self-determination theory, and conservation of resources theory, we suggest ways in which effective personal resource allocation not only decreases negative outcomes (which has been the emphasis in work,life balance research), but also how effective personal resource allocation can actually contribute to positive outcomes. We conclude by providing some practical implications for individuals and organisations based on the PRA framework and suggest future research opportunities. [source]


Children's Primary Health Care Services: A Social-Cognitive Model of Sustained High Use

CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY: SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, Issue 2 2001
David M. Janicke
Significant percentages of children exhibit patterns of sustained high use of primary health care services. Unfortunately, current models fail to explain the processes that drive and maintain such patterns. We draw upon the pediatric utilization and social-cognitive literature to develop a model that explains the mechanisms that ultimately drive and maintain patterns of prolonged high use. Specifically, we propose that parental stress and low self-efficacy for coping with various parenting and life demands interact to drive the utilization of pediatric services. We outlined sequelae of frequent physician that serve to maintain high use. This model suggests a number of psychological interventions that clinical health psychologists might undertake to remediate inappropriate, sustained high use of children's primary healthcare services. [source]


Building resilience for uncertain times

LEADER TO LEADER, Issue 31 2003
Paul G. Stoltz
Strengthening resilience expands your speed and capacity for meeting life's demands. [source]