These ideas were first written about by Professor Urie Bronfenbrenner [24], an American psychologist. He created a model that outlines the important contexts that shape a person’s life.
One way to think about this is to consider all of the relationships (large and small, near and far) in a young person’s life and how these contribute in different ways to their growth and development.
Bronfenbrenner saw that every person’s development is shaped by the interaction between an individual (a young person) and their environment (the different environments young people are part of such as whānau, school and community). He talked about this as a two-way process and said that the behaviour and development of people cannot be considered in isolation from their environment. [9] For example, youth development is influenced by:
- Individual characteristics such as genetic make-up, physical and cognitive ability, emotional processes, temperament and personality
- The environments which young people are directly part of such as home, school, work, sports groups and their community.
- The environments which indirectly impact on young people such as larger cultural, political, global and historical contexts.
- The interactions that occur in and between these various environments.
According to this view, development occurs as a result of interactions that influence each other (bi-directional) between the unique characteristics of an individual and the social, cultural, historical and biological environments they inhabit. Mutually influential interactions recognise that influence is not one-way, people are not only influenced by the contexts they are in, they exert influence and impact on the contexts they are a part of as well. And each of these contexts influence each other. For example:
- A young person is influenced by contexts such as whānau, hapū and iwi, school and workplaces.
- This is not a one-way relationship; young people are also active participants in these contexts and they have influence too.
- Different contexts also influence each other. Think about the quality of interactions between a whānau and a school or the impact of a stressful workplace on a parent, and how these may impact on a young person.
- Now consider broader impacts such as the impact of government policies on issues such as education and employment.