Baker David, Norris Dana, Cherneva Veroniki
School of Psychological, Sociological and Behavioural Sciences, Coventry University, UK.
Employment and Support Team, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Coventry University, UK.
Omega (Westport). 2021 Jun;83(2):239-256. doi: 10.1177/0030222819846420. Epub 2019 May 6.
This article examines the experiences of family members when a loved one dies after police contact in the United States. It uses qualitative data from semistructured interviews with the bereaved families of 43 U.S. citizens who died after police contact and considers their experiences as covictims of homicide. It examines how they experience grief in the aftermath of such a death and considers Doka's concept of disenfranchised grief in evaluating how social norms affect their grieving process. It argues that individuals affected by deaths after police contact are often unable to grieve in a way that is socially legitimized. The article finds that disenfranchised grief has a racial dimension with regard to deaths after police contact with non-White families being deeply affected by it due to their position within society, the context in which their loved one died, and in terms of how the deceased was socially constructed.
本文探讨了在美国,亲人在与警方接触后死亡时家庭成员的经历。它使用了对43名与警方接触后死亡的美国公民的遗属进行半结构化访谈所得的定性数据,并将他们视为杀人案的共同受害者来考量其经历。本文研究了他们在亲人死后如何经历悲痛,并在评估社会规范如何影响他们的悲痛过程时参考了多卡的被剥夺权利的悲痛概念。文章认为,受警方接触后死亡事件影响的个人往往无法以社会认可的方式悲痛。研究发现,在警方接触后死亡事件中,被剥夺权利的悲痛存在种族层面的问题,非白人家庭因其在社会中的地位、亲人死亡的背景以及死者的社会建构方式而深受其影响。