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SPECIAL ISSUE CALL FOR PAPERS: Equitable Pandemic Response &
Recovery: Designing Person Centered Public Health
JOURNAL OF HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY
PLEASE DISTRIBUTE WIDELY
GUEST EDITORS:
- Zeno Franco, PhD, Department of Family & Community Medicine,
DrPH program faculty, Medical College of Wisconsin
- Robert “Biko” Baker, PhD, African and African Diaspora Studies,
University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
- Michael Stevenson, MPH, Population Health Institute, University
of Wisconsin - Madison
- Monique Liston, PhD, Ubuntu Research and Evaluation
- Marques Hogans, MPH, Ascension Wisconsin
- Dawn Yang, Nyob Zoo TV
- Margarita Northrop, MPH, MIPA, Office of Policy and Practice
Alignment, Division of Public Health, State of Wisconsin
- Katinka Hooyer, PhD, Department of Family & Community
Medicine, Center for Healthy Communities & Research, Medical
College of Wisconsin
- Paula Tran Inzeo, MPH, Population Health Institute, University
of Wisconsin - Madison
- David Nelson, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Family
& Community Medicine, DrPH Program Director, Medical College
of Wisconsin
- Anthony BlackOwl Sr, undergraduate student, Department of
Psychology, University of California - Davis
- Marie Sandy, PhD, Department of Administrative Leadership,
Affiliate Faculty, Zilber School of Public Health, University of
Wisconsin - Milwaukee
- Susanne Jul, PhD, Founder, Creative Crisis Leadership
- Ganapathy Pattukandan, PhD, Centre for Mitigation and
Management, Vellore Institute of Technology, Vellore, Tamil Nadu,
India
- Gina Belton, PhD PHN, PhD Psychology Program, Existential
Humanistic Psychology Saybrook University
THOUGHT PARTNERS
- InPower Solutions
- Creative Crisis Leadership
OVERVIEW & INTENT OF THE SPECIAL ISSUE
This special issue is motivated by experiences of the COVID-19
pandemic, and a desire to explore an increasingly
transdisciplinary view of public health, integrating ideas as
decolonial praxis from psychology, ethnography, anthropology,
economics, cultural, arts, and communications studies. Our intent
is to build on conversations about inclusive and equitable
disaster recovery that place individual and lived experiences of
communities - within the context of the broader disaster event -
at the forefront of the discussion.
Humanistic psychology presents a unique and open framework for
exploring how human potential, actualization, and strengths can be
leveraged in challenging situations. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed
how profound inequities in social determinants of health lead to
increased disease incidence, morbidity and mortality in Black,
Indigenous, Hispanic, Asian and other communities, reflecting
generations of colonization and epistemicide. Bridging humanistic
psychology, public health, and communities can provide important
insights about attuning person- and neighborhood-centered public
health strategies for major crisis events to particular cultures,
languages, and value systems.
This special issue will emphasize completed projects that
demonstrate real-world application of the ideas drawn from these
disciplines in applied pandemic response and/or recovery. We are
looking for specific response examples that show significant and
sustained attention to equity, community health concerns, and
culturally attuned public health messaging during the pandemic.
Projects that explicitly navigate issues around individual,
community, and institutional power are encouraged.
We recognize that data capture was often a secondary consideration
to direct community response during the pandemic. Thus, well
constructed post-project analysis, after action reviews,
reflection and commentary are also welcome. Research strategies
that acknowledge epistemic injustice through community-based
practice, cultural centeredness, and application of Traditional
Indigenous Knowledges (TIK) are strongly encouraged. Data that
speak to community views and priorities, including photographs,
field notes, artwork, URL pointers to music, multimedia, software
systems (e.g. chatbots, etc.) are viewed as fundamental forms of
evidence, although projects presenting quantitative data or
mixed-methods approaches are also actively sought. Regardless of
the specific methods or forms of data, clear evidence of direct
public health response that illustrate lessons learned from
completed COVID-19 related projects will be most competitive for
inclusion.
On one hand, we are interested in papers that show effective
partnerships between major agencies and communities, for example,
departments of public health, universities, hospitals, and
healthcare systems working with community-based organizations and
residents. Alternatively, manuscripts might focus on grassroots,
spontaneous responses that are wholly driven at the individual or
neighborhood level without institutional partners. Where
appropriate, the ability to show genuine equity and community
inclusion in authorship will also be given special attention.
Projects that are similarly oriented but reflect other recent
crisis events will be considered. While much of the editorial team
is based in the US, JHP is an international journal. Papers
reflecting lessons from international and transnational projects
are encouraged.
POTENTIAL TOPICS
-- Application of person- & community-centered approaches in
COVID-19
-- Institutional civic engagement and capacity building in the
context of crisis
-- Community health workers, promotores/as, ambassadors in
COVID-19 response
-- Community-led / grassroots pandemic response
-- Attuning public health communication for BIPOC, rural, migrant,
and other hard to reach populations
-- Economic instability, homelessness, workers’ rights &
conditions of employment
-- Managing chronic health considerations during the crisis
-- Mental health as a public health concern during COVID-19
-- Cultural influencers and trusted messengers
-- Arts & music based public health communication strategies
-- Cultivating non-traditional leadership in times of crisis
-- Community power building during the pandemic response
-- Addressing vaccine hesitancy/confidence in communities of color
-- Reflection on the personal, community and societal impact of
the pandemic
-- Innovations in action research and human centered design for
crisis events
-- The role of humanistic psychology in public health and disaster
response
-- Designing equitable and inclusive pandemic recovery
-- Conceptualizing the future of public health as a local and
global priority
PROCESS & DEADLINES
ARTICLE PROPOSAL - to be considered, authors must submit a 1-2
page (800 word maximum) preliminary article proposal. The guest
editors will review for relevance, demonstration of practical
COVID-19 response experience, and may make suggestions about the
direction for the first draft. All proposals will receive
feedback. Authors with the most compelling proposals will be
invited to submit a full manuscript.
Submit article proposals VIA EMAIL TO:
zfranco@mcw.edu Please put
“JHP Special Issue Proposal” in the subject line.
FIRST DRAFT SUBMISSION: Accepted proposals will move on to formal
submission through the Journal’s Scholar One online submission
portal. Guidelines for authors can be found at:
https://au.sagepub.com/en-gb/oce/journal-of-humanistic-psychology/journal200951#submission-guidelines<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://au.sagepub.com/en-gb/oce/journal-of-humanistic-psychology/journal200951*submission-guidelines__;Iw!!H8mHWRdzp34!uEWpXmBOJMegwvby9dO6BHRBi2hBnI0p5Z6El0sNTEKQp8IEkqshutfzT-t8GQk$>
JOURNAL REVIEW PROCESS: All first draft submissions will go
through formal peer review, including at least one external
reviewer, guest editor review, and review from other submitting
authors where authors do not have conflicts of interest. All
submitting authors should expect to provide at least one review of
another article.
ONLINE AHEAD OF PRINT: Because of the number of articles currently
in production at JHP and issues ahead of this one, authors are
cautioned that final print production may be substantially
delayed. However, JHP publishes all accepted articles rapidly in
online ahead of print format. The review schedule for this special
issue is aggressive, in part to ensure that accepted articles are
available online as quickly as possible - both to address
professional needs of the authors and to make information in the
special issue available for ongoing recovery efforts. By
submitting to this venue, authors acknowledge that final print
production may follow at a substantially later date.
STUDENTS AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS: Undergraduate students, graduate
students, community partners and other groups who have been
substantively involved in a COVID-19 response effort are welcome
to submit as lead or supporting authors. The guest editors
emphasize the importance of the role of mentorship into formal
academic discourse and inclusion of multiple, non-traditional
stakeholder types as contributors.
EDITORIAL COLLABORATION SUGGESTIONS: Because of the constraints of
the number of articles that can be included for the special issue,
we may suggest that author groups with no prior collaboration
experience seriously consider presenting multiple case studies as
a single paper. You are free to decline this suggestion, but doing
so may decrease the chances of your work being included because of
space considerations. While authors may initially be uncomfortable
with such collaborations, the resulting case comparison work is
often more powerful, and ends up being heavily cited in the field.
IMPORTANT DATES FOR THE SPECIAL ISSUE
-- October 1, 2021 - Preliminary article proposal due (email
submission)
-- December 1, 2021 - First draft manuscript due (JHP Scholar One
system)
-- February 1, 2022 - Reviewer Feedback completed
-- April 1, 2022 - Final version submitted
INFORMATION ABOUT JHP:
The Journal of Humanistic Psychology (JHP) is an interdisciplinary
forum for contributions, controversies and diverse statements
pertaining to humanistic psychology. It addresses personal growth,
interpersonal encounters, social problems and philosophical
issues. An international journal of human potential,
self-actualization, the search for meaning and social change, the
Journal of Humanistic Psychology was founded by Abraham Maslow and
Anthony Sutich in 1961. It is the official journal of the
Association for Humanistic Psychology.
Publisher: SAGE Journals
JHP Editor In Chief:
Sarah Kamens, PhD
This CFP is also available online:
https://bit.ly/3wSBbtd<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://bit.ly/3wSBbtd__;!!H8mHWRdzp34!uEWpXmBOJMegwvby9dO6BHRBi2hBnI0p5Z6El0sNTEKQp8IEkqshutfzyCNC-s8$>
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https://miro.medium.com/max/1200/1*7zQ-SfMHph0n6j8ejXHBhg.jpeg]
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SPECIAL ISSUE CALL FOR PAPERS: Person Centered Public Health:
Equitable Pandemic Response
&…
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JOURNAL OF HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY
bit.ly
QUESTIONS?
Please email Dr. Zeno Franco, guest editor,
zfranco@mcw.edu
Note that this CFP may be updated with additional information.
Zeno Franco, PhD
Site Co-PI, All of Us Wisconsin
Associate Professor
Family & Community Medicine
Center for Healthy Communities & Research
Office of Community Engagement
DrPh Program Faculty
Medical College of Wisconsin
(414) 955-4372 (direct)
Affiliate Faculty, Computer Science
Marquette University
www.joinallofus.org<https://www.joinallofus.org/en>
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