美国印第安成年人的歧视感、政治效能感和政治参与度

Zachary J. Wood, N. John-Henderson
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摘要

与政治参与有关的心理因素在很大程度上对美国印第安人的研究不足。先前的研究指出,与其他种族和族裔群体相比,美国印第安人的参政水平相对较低,并表明对美国印第安人身份的认同与公民参与的总体水平有关,部分原因是他们认为自己受到了群体歧视:在当前的研究中,我们在 727 名美国印第安成年人样本中设立了两个小组:第一组(398 人)报告了与种族有关的歧视感知,第二组(329 人)报告了与种族或民族无关的歧视感知。我们调查了与种族有关的日常歧视的个人经历、政治效能水平和政治参与(第一组),以及与种族或民族无关的日常歧视的个人经历、政治效能和政治参与(第二组)之间的关系。我们发现,与种族有关的日常歧视的经历越多,通过提高内部和集体效能水平,政治参与水平越高。与此相反,与种族有关的日常歧视经历越多,政治参与度就越高,因为外部政治效能感越低。对于第二组,我们发现,与种族或族裔无关的日常歧视经历越多,政治参与度就越低,但中介分析表明,内部和集体效能感的降低与政治参与度的降低有关系。鉴于美国印第安人的政治参与度较低,政治效能可以成为旨在提高政治系统参与度的干预措施的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Perceived discrimination, political efficacy, and political participation in American Indian adults
Psychological factors linked to political participation are largely understudied in American Indians. Prior work notes relatively low levels of participation compared to other racial and ethnic groups and suggests that identification with being American Indian is linked to overall levels of civic engagement in part through perceptions of group discrimination.In the current work, in a sample of 727 American Indian adults, we created two groups: Group 1 (N = 398) reported perceived discrimination related to race, and Group 2 (N = 329) reported perceived discrimination not related to race or ethnicity. We investigated the relationships between individual experiences of everyday discrimination related to race, levels of political efficacy, and political participation (Group 1), and individual experiences of everyday discrimination not related to race or ethnicity, political efficacy, and political participation (Group 2).We found that greater experiences of everyday discrimination related to race was associated with higher levels of political participation through increased levels of internal and collective efficacy. In contrast, greater experiences of everyday discrimination related to race was associated with higher levels of political participation through lower external political efficacy. For Group 2, we found that greater experiences of everyday discrimination not related to race or ethnicity was not directly associated with political participation, but mediation analyses revealed a relationship with lower levels of political participation through decreased internal and collective efficacy. The indirect effect through external political efficacy was not significant.Given low levels of American Indian political participation, political efficacy could be a target for interventions aiming to increase participation in the political system.
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