Expanding the framework of childhood adversity: Structural violence and aggression in childhood

L. Petrovic , C.N. Baker , S. Francois , M. Wallace , S. Overstreet
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Abstract

Background

Structural violence harms youth by preventing them from meeting basic needs for safety, belonging, dignity, and agency, leading to negative outcomes like increased aggression. Such behaviors harm children's social and emotional well-being and academic success, particularly affecting Black youth who disproportionately experience structural violence. Although predictors of student aggression have been explored, the specific influence of structural violence—as measured through socioeconomic and racial disparities—remains under examined in the literature. This gap highlights the need for further investigation into how these external factors contribute to aggressive behaviors in school settings,

Objective

This study sought to examine the relationship between structural violence and aggression, taking into account key student characteristics and features of the school climate. It was hypothesized that lower values of structural violence would predict increased student and teacher-reported aggression.

Participants

and Setting: Participants included students and teachers across six New Orleans K-8 public charter schools.

Methods

Structural violence was measured via the Index of the Concentration of the Extremes (ICE), a measure of economic and racial inequality within a geographic area. Student characteristics, neighborhood crime rate, and school climate variables were included as covariates.

Results

Results showed that higher structural violence was significantly associated with student-reported aggression (β = −.12, p = .02) and with teacher-reported aggression (β = −.14, p = .02). Lower student-reported aggression was associated with higher perceptions of school safety (β = −.24, p = .04).

Conclusions

Students from neighborhoods with greater structural violence exhibited higher levels of physical aggression, though lower reports of aggression are associated with better perceptions of school climate characteristics.
扩展童年逆境的框架:儿童期结构性暴力与攻击
结构性暴力危害青年,使他们无法满足安全、归属感、尊严和能动性等基本需求,从而导致侵略性增加等负面后果。这种行为损害了儿童的社会和情感健康以及学业成功,尤其影响到那些不成比例地遭受结构性暴力的黑人青年。虽然已经对学生攻击的预测因素进行了探索,但结构性暴力的具体影响——通过社会经济和种族差异来衡量——仍在文献中进行研究。这一差距突出了进一步调查这些外部因素如何促成学校环境中的攻击行为的必要性。目的本研究旨在研究结构性暴力与攻击之间的关系,考虑到学生的主要特征和学校气候的特征。据推测,较低的结构性暴力值预示着学生和教师报告的攻击行为会增加。参与者和背景:参与者包括新奥尔良六所K-8公立特许学校的学生和教师。方法结构性暴力是通过极端集中指数(ICE)来衡量的,这是一个衡量地理区域内经济和种族不平等的指标。共变量包括学生特征、社区犯罪率和学校气候变量。结果结果表明,较高的结构性暴力与学生报告的攻击行为显著相关(β =−)。12, p = .02)和教师报告的攻击性(β = -。14, p = .02)。较低的学生报告的攻击行为与较高的学校安全感知相关(β =−)。24, p = .04)。结论:来自结构性暴力更严重社区的学生表现出更高的身体攻击水平,尽管较低的攻击报告与更好地感知学校气候特征有关。
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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