1 University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI, USA.
2 Hawai'i Pacific University, Honolulu, HI, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2019 Jun;34(11):2292-2312. doi: 10.1177/0886260516660301. Epub 2016 Jul 25.
Drug use has been linked empirically with aggression and violence among youth in national and State of Hawai'i samples. In addition, aggression and violence appear to be gendered experiences perceived differently by girls and boys. This article explores the intersection of drug offers/drug refusals with aggression and violence with specific attention paid to gendered perceptions of drug use situations as a context for aggression and violence. A qualitative study, in which 14 sex-specific focus group discussions were held, focused on rural Native Hawaiian middle school students ( N = 64). Students were asked to discuss drug refusal strategies in a variety of drug offer contexts. Feminist theories and approaches were used to examine the role of aggression and violence in drug refusal as perceived by Native Hawaiian girls as compared with boys. Girls and boys differed in their perceptions of aggression and violence in drug offer situations, initially as evidenced by the extent to which the girl groups focused on the intersection of drugs and violence. Furthermore, qualitative analyses reflected gender norms and stereotypes about aggression and violence perpetration, and girls' apparently unique concerns about sexual violence victimization. Implications are discussed in terms of prevention research and practice, specifically in terms of school-based prevention curricula.
药物使用与全国和夏威夷州青少年群体中的攻击和暴力行为之间存在实证关联。此外,攻击和暴力行为似乎是一种性别体验,女孩和男孩对此有不同的看法。本文探讨了药物提供/拒绝与攻击和暴力之间的交叉点,并特别关注药物使用情况的性别感知,将其作为攻击和暴力的背景。一项定性研究,其中进行了 14 个按性别划分的焦点小组讨论,重点关注农村夏威夷原住民中学生(N=64)。要求学生在各种药物提供情境下讨论拒绝药物的策略。女权主义理论和方法被用来检验在原住民夏威夷女孩眼中,与男孩相比,拒绝药物与攻击性和暴力之间的关系。女孩和男孩对药物提供情境中的攻击和暴力的看法存在差异,最初表现为女孩群体在多大程度上关注毒品和暴力的交叉点。此外,定性分析反映了关于攻击和暴力实施的性别规范和刻板印象,以及女孩对性暴力受害的明显独特关注。讨论了预防研究和实践的意义,特别是在以学校为基础的预防课程方面。