resourcement

noun

Etymology

From re- + source + -ment.

  1. derived from resurgō
  2. derived from resourse
  3. borrowed from ressource
  4. suffixed as resourcement — “resource + ment

Definitions

  1. A theological movement involving a return to the original sources of the Catholic church.

  2. A strategy for dealing with conflict in which one changes the source of emotional energy…

    A strategy for dealing with conflict in which one changes the source of emotional energy in an encounter to provide a new and creative response.

    • . Through resourcement, organizational members develop radically creative responses that frame an issue differently.
    • Sometimes, disengagement itself constitutes the entire process of resourcement. You literally might choose to walk away from an encounter rather than continue a negative interaction.
  3. The provision of resources.

    • Studies focusing on large regions, for example, were common well before the last ten years in areas where cultural resourcement management projects are infrequent and measurement of social relationships is difficult.
    • Secondly, looking at coping and resourcement management, Angela, by refusing services, became unable to cope with and manage her environment to obtain her goal of staying out of a nursing home.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for resourcement. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA