Tian GuoxiuRestrepo Henao, AlexandraTheron, LindaVanderPlaat, Madine2015-03-132015-03-132015-02http://hdl.handle.net/10625/53853Despite exposure to poverty, violence, mental illness, marginalization due to race, ethnicity, ability, divorce or death of their parents, cultural dislocation, and other risks, research shows that many at-risk youth still become active contributors to their families and as citizens in their communities. What would locally designed interventions look like that promote resilience (citizenship, prosociality, safety, etc.) for youth exposed to significant risk associated with their social and physical ecologies? As well as conducting research responding to this question, Pathways participants, researchers and students/interns were afforded 20 opportunities to learn and enhance their research-related skills.Text1 digital file (227 p. : ill.)application/pdfenRESILIENCEYOUTHCHINACOLOMBIASOUTH AFRICACOMMUNITY ADVISORY PANELSOCIAL ECOLOGYFORMAL SERVICE ECOLOGYFORMAL SUPPORTSINFORMAL SUPPORTSMIXED METHODSSOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTHPROJECT REPORTSQUESTIONNAIRESSOCIAL WORKPathways to resilience : formal service and informal support use patterns among youth in challenging social ecologies; final technical reportFinal Technical Report