Collaboration Skills Recovery in Formerly Oppressed Communities: Reparations for Psychological Health Rehabilitation

Authors

  • Dennis Ridley Florida A&M University, Florida State University
  • Inessa Korovyakovskaya Savannah State University

Keywords:

business, economics, collaboration, CDR economic model, gross domestic product, sports and music training, gene therapy, psychological health rehabilitation reparations

Abstract

It is well known that countries that rank highly in capitalism, democracy and rule of law (CDR) have high levels of real per capita gross domestic product (GDP) adjusted for purchasing power parity (GDPppp). But collaboration is essential for rule of law, and collaboration skills may have been lost due to prior stresses such as forced labor, excessive discrimination, and chemical exposures in formerly oppressed communities. These psychologically debilitating outcomes can be transmitted to human progeny via negative epigenetic transgenerational psycho-sequela, indefinitely. The result can be low academic and job performance, low income, self-harm, poor community relations and high aggression. The purpose of this paper is to explore the design of a framework for psychological health rehabilitation reparations designed to regain lost collaboration skills as an alternative to direct payments to individuals. The novelty of the paper is the framework for the recovery of collaboration skill through mandatory sport and music training and gene therapy that is the basis of extraordinary economic growth and higher average income nationwide.

Downloads

Published

2025-03-31

How to Cite

Ridley, D., & Korovyakovskaya, I. (2025). Collaboration Skills Recovery in Formerly Oppressed Communities: Reparations for Psychological Health Rehabilitation. Journal of Business & Economics Research, 18(1). Retrieved from https://journals.klalliance.org/index.php/JBER/article/view/507

Issue

Section

Articles