黑人和拉丁裔少女对性别化种族微词、家庭种族社会化和批判行动的经历的定量调查

Youth Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.3390/youth4020032
Taina B. Quiles, Channing J. Mathews, Raven A. Ross, Maria Rosario, Seanna C. Leath
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当黑人和拉丁裔少女遭遇种族和性别歧视时,她们可能会求助于自己的家庭,探究自己对系统性不公正和压迫的看法和应对措施。家庭种族社会化可能是批判行动(如社区行动主义)的一个切入点,它将青少年成长过程中的种族认同和批判意识联系在一起。我们采用分层线性回归法来研究家庭种族社会化是否会调节性别化种族主义经历与社区行动主义之间的关系。我们分析了来自美国南部的 315 名黑人(n = 158)、拉丁裔/非洲裔拉丁裔(n = 157)女孩(n = 282)和性别扩张型青年(13-17 岁)的调查数据。我们发现,接受更多家庭社会化教育、更经常被定型为易怒的女孩参与了更多低风险和正式的政治活动。此外,更经常被定型为愤怒并从家庭中接受更多种族主义信息的黑人和拉丁裔女孩参与了更多的高风险激进主义,而更经常被视为愤怒并接受较少种族社会化的女孩则参与了较少的高风险激进主义。我们讨论了我们的研究结果对支持黑人和拉丁裔女孩社会政治发展的家庭、教育工作者和学者的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Quantitative Investigation of Black and Latina Adolescent Girls’ Experiences of Gendered Racial Microaggressions, Familial Racial Socialization, and Critical Action
As Black and Latina adolescent girls experience race and gender discrimination, they may turn to their families to explore their beliefs about and responses to systemic injustice and oppression. Familial racial socialization is a likely entry point for critical action (like community activism), linking ethnic–racial identity and critical consciousness in youth development. We used hierarchical linear regression to investigate whether familial racial socialization moderated the relationship between experiences of gendered racism and community activism. We analyzed survey data for 315 Black (n = 158) and Latina/Afro-Latina (n = 157) girls (n = 282) and gender expansive youth (age 13–17) from the southern United States. We found that girls who received more familial socialization and were more frequently stereotyped as being angry participated in more low-risk and formal political activism. Also, Black and Latina girls who were more frequently stereotyped as angry and received more messages about racism from their families engaged in more high-risk activism, while girls who were more frequently perceived as angry and received less racial socialization engaged in less high-risk activism. We discuss the implications of our results for families, educators, and scholars who support Black and Latina girls’ sociopolitical development.
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