Sittner Hartshorn Kelley J, Whitbeck Les B, Hoyt Dan R
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 210 Benton Hall, Lincoln NE 68588-0623.
Soc Ment Health. 2012 Mar 1;2(1):53-67. doi: 10.1177/2156869312441185. Epub 2012 Mar 28.
A growing body of research has documented associations between discrimination, anger and delinquency, but the exact nature of these associations remains unclear. Specifically, do aggressive behaviors emerge over time as a consequence of perceived discrimination and anger? Or do adolescents who engage in aggressive behavior perceive that they are being discriminated against and become angry? We use autoregressive cross-lagged path analysis on a sample of 692 Indigenous adolescents (mean age=12 years) from the Northern Midwest and Canada to answer these research questions. Results showed that the direction of effects went only one way; both perceived discrimination and anger were significantly associated with subsequent aggression. Moreover, early discrimination and anger each had indirect effects on aggressive behavior three years later, and anger partially mediated the association between discrimination and aggression. Perceived discrimination is but one of many strains related to their unequal social position that these Indigenous youth experience, and have important implications for the proliferation of disparities in later life.
越来越多的研究记录了歧视、愤怒和犯罪行为之间的关联,但这些关联的确切性质仍不清楚。具体而言,攻击性行为是随着时间的推移,由感知到的歧视和愤怒导致的吗?还是从事攻击性行为的青少年认为自己受到了歧视并因此变得愤怒?我们对来自美国中西部北部和加拿大的692名原住民青少年(平均年龄 = 12岁)进行了自回归交叉滞后路径分析,以回答这些研究问题。结果表明,影响的方向是单向的;感知到的歧视和愤怒都与随后的攻击行为显著相关。此外,早期的歧视和愤怒对三年后的攻击行为都有间接影响,并且愤怒部分介导了歧视与攻击行为之间的关联。感知到的歧视只是这些原住民青少年因其不平等的社会地位所经历的众多压力之一,并且对他们日后生活中差异的扩散具有重要影响。