Resilience and marginalized youth: Making a case for personal and collective meaning-making as part of resilience research in public health

The public health research community has long recognized the roles of discrimination, institutional structures, and unfair economic practices in the production and maintenance of health disparities, but it has neglected the ways in which the interpretation of these structures orients people in overc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2009-08, Vol.69 (4), p.565-570
Hauptverfasser: Wexler, Lisa Marin, DiFluvio, Gloria, Burke, Tracey K.
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creator Wexler, Lisa Marin
DiFluvio, Gloria
Burke, Tracey K.
description The public health research community has long recognized the roles of discrimination, institutional structures, and unfair economic practices in the production and maintenance of health disparities, but it has neglected the ways in which the interpretation of these structures orients people in overcoming them and achieving positive outcomes in their lives. In this call for researchers to pay more – and more nuanced – attention to cultural context, we contend that group identity–as expressed through affiliation with an oppressed group–can itself prompt meaningful role-based action. Public health's study of resilience, then, must consider the ways that individuals understand and, in turn, resist discrimination. In this article, we briefly outline the shortcomings of current perspectives on resilience as they pertain to the study of marginalized youth and then consider the potential protection offered by ideological commitment. To ground our conceptual argument, we use examples from two different groups with whom the authors have worked for many years: indigenous and sexual minority youth. Though these groups are dissimilar in many ways, the processes related to marginalization, identity and resilience are remarkably similar. Specifically, group affiliation can provide a context to reconceptualize personal difficulty as a politicized collective struggle, and through this reading, can create a platform for ideological commitment and resistance.
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subjects Adaptation, Psychological
Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior
Alaska Native Sexual minority
American Indian/Alaska Native
Biological and medical sciences
Childrens health
Clinical outcomes
Community
Culture
Developmental psychology
Discrimination
Health
Homosexuality - psychology
Humans
Identity
Indians, North American - psychology
Indigenous
Indigenous Populations
Marginality
Marginalized groups
Medical research
Medical sciences
Minority Groups - psychology
Miscellaneous
North America
Prejudice
Psychology, Adolescent
Public Health
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Research framework
Resilience
Resilience Youth Indigenous Discrimination Marginalized groups Research framework American Indian
Risk Factors
Sexual Behavior
Sexual minority
Sexuality
Social Environment
Social exclusion
Social Identification
Social identity
Social Inequality
Social networks
Social psychology
Social research
Stress, Psychological
Youth
title Resilience and marginalized youth: Making a case for personal and collective meaning-making as part of resilience research in public health
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