A pragmatic environmental psychology: A metatheoretical inquiry into the work of M. Powell Lawton |
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Authors: | Keith Diaz Moore Kimberly VanHaitsma Kim Curyto Avalie Saperstein |
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Institution: | a Architecture and Landscape Architecture, Washington State University, USA;b Madlyn and Leonard Abramson Center for Jewish Life, Polisher Research Institute, 1425 Horsham Road, Philadelphia, PA 19454-1320, USA;c , Elkins Park, PA, USA |
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Abstract: | Environmental psychology is a field of such great diversity—in topics of interest, research approaches, in disciplinarity—that it often appears to lack coherence, exemplified by its poor fit within paradigmatic frameworks found in academic psychology, resulting in its “outlier” status. This paper explores the work of the environmental gerontologist M. Powell Lawton, as an exemplar of environmental psychology research, suggesting that such a review renders greater insight into the current state of the field than any top-down applied conceptual framework. Themes discussed include Lawton's theoretical perspective on the person, the environment, and the relationship between them, his inquiry at various units of analysis; the type of knowledge valued as evidenced in his work; and his fundamental applied orientation, all of which are reflective of contemporary directions within environmental psychology as a whole. Reviewed is Lawton's final proposal that takes an “epistemologically inclusive” approach, embodying all of the themes above and reflective of inquiry sought within pragmatic psychology. As such, it is argued that environmental psychology may find great affinity with the pragmatic psychology approach currently gaining impetus within applied and clinical psychology. |
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