Familial and religious ethnic-racial socialization in promoting activism among Asian American Christians.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Emi Ichimura, Tara Shelby, Trevor Taone, Paul Youngbin Kim, Joel Jin
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Abstract

The adversity faced by Asian Americans (AAs) due to discrimination is a testament to the ongoing fight for human rights. At the crux of social activism, familial and religious ethnic-racial socialization (ERS) instills cultural values, ethnic identity, belonging to one's racial group, and a meaningful outlook, navigating generations through these challenges. This study examined the role of family and religion in amplifying social advocacy among AAs by assessing the relationship between race-related stress and social activism, as well as the mediating role of familial and religious ERS via a parallel mediation. Our research, utilizing a cross-sectional, nonexperimental design, involved 254 AA emerging adults identifying as Christian (Mage = 29.06, SDage = 7.55), sourced from Prolific (n = 203) and community sampling (n = 51). Linear regression findings revealed significant positive associations between familial ERS and social action (β = .226, p < .001), as well as religious ERS and social action (β = .085, p = .033). Nevertheless, parallel mediation analysis through bootstrapping demonstrated that neither familial nor religious ERS fully mediated the effects of race-related stress on social activism. These results underscore the significance of applying culturally imbued insights from different contexts to address discrimination within the AA Christian community. Scrutinizing these pathways can safeguard AA Christians, while promoting the amalgamation of Christian theology and psychological science. Future research should address the spectrum of beliefs and practices within Christianity that intersect with AA families and culture, unraveling the foundations of the call for social action. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

促进亚裔美国基督徒积极性的家庭和宗教种族社会化。
亚裔美国人(AAs)因歧视而面临的逆境证明了争取人权的斗争仍在继续。作为社会活动的核心,家庭和宗教的种族社会化(ERS)灌输了文化价值观、种族认同、种族群体归属感和有意义的人生观,引领几代人度过这些挑战。本研究通过评估与种族有关的压力和社会活动之间的关系,以及家庭和宗教 ERS 通过平行调解所发挥的中介作用,考察了家庭和宗教在扩大 AAs 社会倡导方面的作用。我们的研究采用横截面、非实验性设计,涉及 254 名自称为基督徒的成年非裔美国人(平均年龄 = 29.06 岁,平均年龄 = 7.55 岁),他们来自 Prolific(n = 203)和社区抽样(n = 51)。线性回归结果显示,家庭 ERS 与社会行动(β = .226,p < .001)以及宗教 ERS 与社会行动(β = .085,p = .033)之间存在明显的正相关。然而,通过引导分析进行的平行中介分析表明,家庭和宗教 ERS 都不能完全中介种族相关压力对社会行动的影响。这些结果凸显了应用来自不同背景的文化启示来解决 AA 基督教社区歧视问题的重要性。仔细研究这些途径可以保护 AA 基督徒,同时促进基督教神学与心理科学的融合。未来的研究应探讨基督教中与 AA 族家庭和文化交织在一起的各种信仰和实践,揭示社会行动呼吁的基础。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,保留所有权利)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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