This edited volume focuses on psychosocial interventions for some of the most persistent social concerns in contemporary India. These social issues range from agrarian distress and farmers suicide, violence against women, socio-economic disparities and mental health concerns, contexts of social and political conflict and inter-group tensions, to substance use in youth, suicide in students and youth in particular, and the recent public health crisis of Covid. The field of mainstream psychology, particularly in India, is primarily preoccupied with interventions to alleviate psychological distress at the individual level. This volume, however, expands this traditional focus on the individual and spotlights, instead, the psychosocial. Through illustrative examples of psychosocial interventions, it underscores the necessity of blending a recognition and understanding of the structural inequities and power imbalances that impact well-being with psychological processes of intervention that are attuned to the principles of social justice, human rights, and inclusion. This volume is based on interventions that have either been carried out or are a work in progress located in regions across India. This volume is helpful to students, researchers, and practitioners of varied fields, spanning psychology, social work and allied disciplines, as well as those in the development and social policy sector, for gaining new perspectives and insights. It aims to stimulate new ideas for conceptualizing and setting in practice interventions that integrate the psychological and the social while addressing issues of contemporary social concern.
What is this book about? Principles and practice of psychosocial
interventions .- Rise to Stardom: Mental health and digital interventions in
the context of COVID 19.- COVID-19 pandemic and Mental health and
psychosocial Interventions in India:
Decoding the Past and Informing the Future.- Feminist psychosocial
intervention approaches to respond to domestic violence against
women: Evolution and emerging evidence from India.- Psychosocial
interventions with communities to prevent violence against women and girls in
complex urban informal settings.
U. Vindhya was formerly with Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Hyderabad campus, Andhra University, Visakhapatnam, and the Centre for Economic and Social Studies, Hyderabad. Her research interests lie at the intersections of psychology, feminism, social justice and human rights, with a focus on gender and mental health, violence against women, trafficking, feminist counselling, and the psychological dynamics of women's political activism. Her publications include the co-edited Handbook of International Feminisms: Perspectives on Psychology, Women, Culture and Rights (Springer, New York) which won the 2012 Distinguished Publication Award from the Association for Women in Psychology (USA); and Feminist Psychologies: Identities, Relations and Well-being in India (Routledge, 2024).