Skip to Content
A person’s belief in their ability to succeed in a given situation, and the degree of control they believe they have over a situation.

Outcomes

Resilience
  • Individuals are resilient to the personal factors that lead to violent extremism

    This outcome relates to building individual resilience and self-confidence and increasing protective factors against an individual’s radicalisation to violent extremism. Individuals who feel a strong sense of worth and are well connected to society (positive relationships with family and friends) are likely to be more resilient against negative anti-social influences that may lead them down a pathway of radicalisation. A lack of a sense of belonging to mainstream society and connectedness to social institutions such as schools can result in individuals seeking alternative avenues to develop a sense of identity. A CVE program may aim to improve self-efficacy (capacity to cope), increase the level of connectedness an individual feels towards his/her local community, or encourage positive behaviours and attitudes towards self, the local community and the wider Australian community.

Ways to measure

See the Countering Violence Extremism Evaluation Indicator Document [Pp 10-29] for practical suggestions on ways to measure such as survey instruments, example questions and using administrative data.

  • The General Self-Efficacy Scale (GSE)
  • Scale of Perceived Social Self-Efficacy (PSSE)
  • Parenting Self-Agency Measure (PSAM)

Evaluations that use this indicator