Contact Information
M/C 716
Champaign, IL 61820
Research Areas
Research Description
Rappaport's interests span the broad domain of community psychology, a field he first conceptualized in 1977 with the publication of Community Psychology: Values, Research and Action (Holt, Rinehart and Winston) and most recently with the Handbook of Community Psychology (see list of publications). Interests span multiple levels of analysis, including social policy. Empirical research has been concerned with alternatives to professional care, particularly for those who are outside the mainstream of economic and social power. Substantive topics include juvenile justice, prevention and empowerment, self and mutual help especially for people with a history of serious mental illness, and school consultation and community organization with attention to the education of poor and minority children. Collaborative and qualitative research, empowerment and narrative theory, and identity in the context of personal and social change are some of the theories and methods applied to current work.
Education
Ph.D. from the University of Rochester
Recent Publications
Rappaport, J. (2000). Community narratives: Tales of terror and joy. American Journal of Community Psychology, 28, 1-24.
Rappaport, J. (2005) Community psychology is (thank God) more than science. American Journal of Community Psychology, 35, 231-238.
Rappaport, J.(2004) On becomming a community psychologist: The intersection of autobiography and history. In J. G. Kelly & A. Song (Eds.) Six community psychologists tell their stories: History, contexts, and narrative. New York: Haworth.
Rappaport, J., & Seidman, E. (Eds.) (2000). Handbook of Community Psychology. New York: Plenum/Kluwer.
Wiley, A., & Rappaport, J. (2000). Empowerment, wellness and the politics of development. In D. Cicchetti, J. Rappaport, I. Sandler, & R. Weissberg (Eds.), The promotion of wellness in children and adolescents. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.