Racism and Mental Health: The Moderating Role of Critical Consciousness for Black Adolescents

Youth Pub Date : 2024-05-10 DOI:10.3390/youth4020044
Elan C. Hope, Alexandrea R. Golden, Nkemka Anyiwo
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Abstract

This study examined experiences of individual, institutional, and cultural racism, along with critical consciousness (i.e., critical reflection, critical agency, critical action), and how they are associated with mental health outcomes for Black adolescents (N = 604; Mage = 15.4; 47.4% female). Consistent with previous research, we found that more experiences of racism were associated with more mental health distress for Black adolescents. We also found that the relationship between racism and mental health varied by critical reflection and critical action, in a three-way interaction effect. The positive association between racism and mental health distress was weaker for the Black adolescents in our sample who reported higher than average critical reflection and lower than average critical action. This evidence suggests that the reflection and action components of critical consciousness, together, can serve as an adaptive coping strategy to guard against the harm racism can cause to mental health. Black adolescents experience less mental health distress when they have a deep understanding of oppression, but do not engage heavily in actions to dismantle those unjust systems. These findings have implications for how youth researchers and practitioners can support critical consciousness development in ways that do not compromise adolescent mental health.
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种族主义与心理健康:黑人青少年批判意识的调节作用
本研究考察了黑人青少年(人数 = 604;年龄 = 15.4;女性占 47.4%)的个人、机构和文化种族主义经历以及批判意识(即批判性反思、批判性机构、批判性行动),以及它们与心理健康结果之间的关联。与之前的研究一致,我们发现,黑人青少年遭受种族主义的经历越多,他们的心理健康问题就越严重。我们还发现,种族主义与心理健康之间的关系因批判性反思和批判性行动的不同而不同,存在三方互动效应。对于样本中批判性反思高于平均水平、批判性行动低于平均水平的黑人青少年来说,种族主义与心理健康困扰之间的正相关性较弱。这些证据表明,批判意识中的反思和行动部分可以共同作为一种适应性应对策略,以防范种族主义对心理健康造成的伤害。当黑人青少年对压迫有深刻理解,但并不积极采取行动来拆除这些不公正的制度时,他们的心理健康问题就会减少。这些发现对青少年研究人员和从业人员如何以不损害青少年心理健康的方式支持批判意识的发展具有启示意义。
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