Patricia Herzog

Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis United States of America

Patricia Snell Herzog is Melvin Simon Chair and Associate Professor of Philanthropic Studies in the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy and Affiliate Faculty in the Department of Sociology and the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering in Indianapolis. As an interdisciplinary scholar, Herzog earned a Ph.D. and MA in Sociology from the University of Notre Dame, an MSW in Community Practice from the University of Denver, and a BA in Sociology and Psychology from the University of Arizona. Her research interests include charitable giving, civic engagement, and youth. She has authored and co-authored numerous articles and books, including The Science of College: Navigating the First Year and Beyond (Oxford) and The Science of Generosity: Manifestations, Causes, and Consequences (Palgrave).

Patricia Herzog

1books edited

1chapters authored

Latest work with IntechOpen by Patricia Herzog

This edited volume investigates young people within their social contexts. The focus is on engaging young people as they transition from youth into young adulthood. Key advantages of this book are its embodiment of interdisciplinarity in gathering research across a range of diverse methods, theories, settings, and countries. The volume begins with reviews of key theories and methods in understanding young people within their social networked contexts of generosity, networks, identity, and ethnic heritage. The second section includes chapters attending to education and work as contexts for transitions to adulthood, counseling, meaning, and aesthetics from high school to college and into workplaces. The third section includes chapters studying community engagement and the well-being of young people, including social support, meaning in life, religiosity, spirituality, stress coping, yoga, and sports. The diverse topics addressed in this edited volume are generosity, philanthropy, voluntary action, social networks, social identity, personhood, ethnic heritage, post-colonialism, intersectionality, personality, lived experiences, informal economy, sustainability, pandemic, family support, educational counselors, motivation, ?Not in Education, Employment, or Training? (NEET), everyday aesthetics, built environment, generativity, community, adult allies, youth engagement, life satisfaction, spiritual identity, religious affiliation, stress, practicing yoga, sexual violence, athletes, sports climate, pressures to perform, resilience, and neurodiversity. Disciplines span economics, business, education, sociology, psychology, medical science, geography, journalism, architecture, engineering, science and technology, and applied sciences. Methods include quantitative surveys, qualitative in-depth interviews, life course biographies, ethnographic case studies, bibliometric analysis, and integrative reviews. Young people are investigated across thirteen countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, Yemen, Ghana, Bahrain, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Iceland, Canada, Romania, and the Netherlands.

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