Measurement and predictors of resilience among Latin American public relations professionals An application of the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC)
Fecha
2019-10-28
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
Journal of Communication Management. Emerald Publishing Limited
Resumen
Purpose – It is well established that greater resilience buffers the negative effects of adverse events and
conditions, allowing the affected individual to recover adequately. Resilience is a core trait for public relations
practitioners, due to the challenging and pressure-laden nature of their work. However, as an individual-level
trait, this phenomenon remains underexplored in the communication field. The purpose of this paper is to
examine the dimensionality and measurement invariance of the 25-item Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale
(Connor and Davidson, 2003), evaluate the level of resilience and identify predictors of resilience among Latin
American public relations practitioners.
Design/methodology/approach – A population of 898 public relations professionals from 18 Latin
American countries working on different hierarchical levels, both in communication departments and
agencies across the region were surveyed.
Findings – CD-RISC global scorings show direct correlations with age, years of experience, type of
organization, hierarchy and social media skills. However, education, salary, gender or working in an
excellent, successful and influential communication department were not predictors of resilience.
Additionally, results provide supporting evidence that the CD-RISC has good psychometric properties
and can be used as a reliable and valid tool to assess resilience among Latin American public
relations practitioners.
Research limitations/implications – As in any study using self-report measures, the results may have
been influenced by participants’ acquiescence and need for social desirability. Greater participation is needed
from some countries to allow for a more comprehensive comparative analysis.
Practical implications – Identifying factors that protect against negative outcomes is important for the
development of strengths-based approaches that emphasize resilience. Moreover, in predicting the ability to
tolerate stress and its negative effects, this study may help in the selection of personnel who will manage
tougher job demands.
Originality/value – Research on the concept of resilience has gained substantial momentum over the past
decades and has become a multidisciplinary field of research spanning a variety of theoretical and
conceptual positions. However, practitioner resilience has not formally addressed in the public relations
research, with the sole exception of the qualitative research conducted by Guo and Anderson in 2018
using a critical incident technique approach. This field provides an intriguing context to study resilience
because practitioners are regularly engaged in work that may require the ability to “bounce back” from
challenging work.
Descripción
Acknowledgements
This paper forms part of a special section “Challenging public relations research and practice: towards new understandings”.
Palabras clave
Citación
Moreno, A., Navarro, C., Molleda, J.-C. and Fuentes-Lara, M.C. (2019), "Measurement and predictors of resilience among Latin American public relations professionals: An application of the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC)", Journal of Communication Management, Vol. 23 No. 4, pp. 393-411. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCOM-01-2019-0004
Colecciones
Excepto si se señala otra cosa, la licencia del ítem se describe como Atribución 4.0 Internacional