Wade Jeannette, Peralta Robert L
a Department of Sociology , The University of Akron , Akron , Ohio , USA.
J Ethn Subst Abuse. 2017 Apr-Jun;16(2):165-180. doi: 10.1080/15332640.2015.1113152. Epub 2016 Mar 15.
Previous research has demonstrated that White college students are more likely to drink alcohol at a greater frequency and quantity compared to their African American counterparts. Examining race-related factors that structure alcohol use among college students remains an important area of research. In this study, we specifically examine perceived discrimination and its association with both heavy episodic drinking (HED) and alcohol abstinence among college students. Items that measured perceived racial discrimination in alcohol use contexts and demographic characteristics were used as independent and control variables. African American students were more likely to abstain from alcohol and less likely to engage in HED compared to their White counterparts. Results also suggest that students who believe their drinking will solicit race-based police bias have lower odds of engaging in HED and greater odds of alcohol abstention. We conclude that unsolicited policing, experienced by African Americans generally, and White Americans on campuses, explains effect sizes.
先前的研究表明,与非裔美国大学生相比,白人大学生更有可能更频繁、大量地饮酒。研究影响大学生饮酒行为的种族相关因素仍是一个重要的研究领域。在本研究中,我们专门考察了感知到的歧视及其与大学生重度饮酒(HED)和戒酒之间的关联。在饮酒情境中测量感知到的种族歧视的项目以及人口统计学特征被用作自变量和控制变量。与白人学生相比,非裔美国学生更有可能戒酒,而进行重度饮酒的可能性较小。结果还表明,那些认为自己饮酒会引发基于种族的警察偏见的学生进行重度饮酒的几率较低,而戒酒的几率较高。我们得出结论,非裔美国人普遍经历的以及美国白人在校园中经历的无端治安检查解释了效应大小。