Traumatic Incidents and Experiences of Racism and Sexism: Examining Associations with Components of Critical Consciousness for System‐Involved Girls of Color

Scholarship identifies critical consciousness as a key developmental asset in promoting the well‐being of adolescents experiencing multiple socio‐structural axes of oppression. Girls of color at acute risk for legal system involvement or re‐involvement are absent from this literature. They are a cri...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of community psychology 2021-03, Vol.67 (1-2), p.64-75
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Sukhmani, Berezin, McKenzie N., Wallach, Leila N., B. Godfrey, Erin, Javdani, Shabnam
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Scholarship identifies critical consciousness as a key developmental asset in promoting the well‐being of adolescents experiencing multiple socio‐structural axes of oppression. Girls of color at acute risk for legal system involvement or re‐involvement are absent from this literature. They are a critical population in which to examine this construct given their experiences of oppression and the myriad benefits of critical consciousness. The current study addresses this gap by examining traumatic incidents and experiences of racism and sexism as correlates of critical reflection and action among a sample of girls (N = 220; Mean age = 14.5 years; SD = 1.3 years). Using path analysis and multigroup modeling, we examine direct associations between these three manifestations of structural oppression and critical consciousness and explore the interplay of traumatic incidents, and racism and sexism in girls’ critical consciousness development. Findings suggest that experiences of sexism and racism, uniquely and positively predict critical action, but not critical reflection. Surprisingly, girls’ experiences of traumatic incidents do not predict reflection or action. Finally, multigroup analyses show no evidence that these associations vary by the interplay of traumatic incidents, racism, and sexism. Implications for community psychology values and juvenile legal system practice and policy are discussed. Highlights Experiences of sexism and racism uniquely predict critical action but not critical reflection. Traumatic incidents are not associated with critical reflection or critical action. System‐involved girls engage in multiple forms of critical action. Analyses show associations do not vary by the interplay of traumatic incidents, racism and sexism.
ISSN:0091-0562
1573-2770
DOI:10.1002/ajcp.12479