MACRO-SOCIAL INTERVENTIONS
Innovative Macro-social Interventions
Top-down
Efforts to influence national and/or
international authorities to craft laws and develop policies that are informed
by psychological science
Middle-out
Efforts to influence community leaders,
who in turn influence leaders above them along with their constituencies
Bottom-up
Efforts to influence large numbers
of people directly
Based on
Policy Development
Group Work
Local Empowerment
Multidisciplinary Explanations and Solutions
Epistemological Trap of Reductionism
Goal To Improve Collective Well-being
Social Justice Focus
Conceptual Core
Systems Analytic Framework
Multi-sectoral
Multi-level
Target Actors / Institutions and Exploit their Linkages
Locally and Vertically
Sensitivity to Ethics, Culture, and Power
Beware of Universalism
Examples
Top-down
Institutionalization of Orphans
Middle-out
Interactive Problem-solving
Bottom-up
Community Empowerment and Capacity
Building
Mixed-model Interventions
Truth and Reconciliation Commissions
DISCUSSION:
➢ How can macro-social interventions be designed to accommodate
universal dimensions of culture (e.g., individualism-collectivism, science-folklore)
and unique features of a particular culture?
➢ How should a psychologist prepare before proposing a
macro-social intervention, especially one intended for use in an unfamiliar
context and setting?