Abstract
This study investigated how Italian emerging adults coped during COVID-19 from a
Positive Youth Development framework. Five hundred sixty-five 18- to 29-year-olds completed
surveys measuring personal (cognitive reappraisal, optimism), ecological (support and emotional
connection with community) assets, and adaptation outcomes (anxiety and future societal
expectations) during (T1) and after (T2) lockdown. Utilizing a person-centered approach, four
profiles emerged at T1: promotive (high personal/ecological assets), personal (high personal/low
ecological), contextual (low personal/high ecological), vulnerable (low on both). The promotive
profile had the highest future societal expectations. The promotive/personal/contextual profiles
reported the lowest anxiety at T2. Employing a variable-centered approach, only support and
emotional connection with the community at T1 linked to reduced anxiety at T2;
personal/ecological assets at T1 were not related to future societal expectations at T2. Findings
supported PYD assumptions, indicating alignment of personal/ecological assets aids adaptation.
We discuss implications for supporting young adults during crises like pandemics.