The 12 Dimensions of Wellness: A Framework for Healing, Justice, and Systemic Transformation

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Abstract

Dominant wellness models have long shaped frameworks in public health, behavioral care, and education. However, they often overlook the structural, cultural, and systemic conditions that define wellness for marginalized and justice-impacted communities. Foundational models such as Hettler’s Six Dimensions and Swarbrick’s Eight Dimensions provide essential scaffolding but fail to capture the full spectrum of harm and potential for healing within communities shaped by colonizing systems: the structures and ideologies that perpetuate colonialism.This article introduces the 12 Dimensions of Wellness: a justice-rooted, community-informed framework that incorporates four essential yet underrepresented domains in mainstream literature: creative, cultural, digital, and the newly defined carceral wellness. Carceral wellness, introduced here for the first time, is defined as a relative state of immunity to, resilience from, or recovery after the physical, psychological, social, and systemic harms imposed by carceral systems. It reflects both the enduring impacts of criminalization and the capacity to construct life-affirming alternatives.Grounded in lived experience and participatory insight, this framework offers a culturally situated and structurally aware reconceptualization of interdimensional wellness. The article explores the model’s theoretical underpinnings, its intersections, and envisioned applications across health, legal, and social systems, advocating for a wellness paradigm rooted not only in individual behavior but in collective liberation.

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