School of Education and Human Development, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2021 May;62(5):563-579. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.13392. Epub 2021 Apr 1.
Research has identified the United States (U.S.) as a global outlier in its firearm ownership rates, with a correspondingly higher risk of youth firearm violence compared to other countries. The relative extent of disparities in youth firearm violence within the U.S. has been less clear. Little is known about factors in the social ecology driving these disparities and whether current firearm violence prevention approaches sufficiently address them.
Applying a health disparities framework, we synthesized epidemiological, sociological, and prevention science literatures, emphasizing structural inequalities in youth sociocultural positionality in life course developmental context. We also highlighted findings from national injury data and other studies regarding the magnitude and impacts of youth firearm violence disparities.
The burden of firearm violence varied markedly at intersections of gender, race, place, developmental stage, and homicidal or suicidal intent. Firearm homicide among Black boys and young men (ages 15-24) was at outlier levels - many times greater than the rates of any other demographic group, developmental stage, or violence intent, particularly in urban settings. Recent research has operationalized structural racism and implicated historically racialized spaces as a root cause of this disparity. In contrast, elevated firearm suicide rates were found among Native and White boys and young men in rural settings; firearm-related cultural attitudes and gender socialization were points of consideration to explain these disparities. We highlighted research-based youth firearm violence preventive interventions, and emphasized gaps in efforts focused on structural and sociocultural factors.
More explicit attention to reducing firearm homicide among Black boys and young men and firearm suicide among Native and rural White boys and young men is urgently needed and has potential to substantially lower overall rates of firearm violence in the U.S.
研究发现,美国在枪支拥有率方面是全球的一个异类,与其他国家相比,美国年轻人遭遇枪支暴力的风险相应更高。美国国内年轻人枪支暴力的差异程度则不太清楚。对于造成这些差异的社会生态因素以及当前枪支暴力预防措施是否足以解决这些问题,人们知之甚少。
我们应用健康差异框架,综合了流行病学、社会学和预防科学文献,强调了青年在人生发展过程中社会文化定位的结构性不平等。我们还强调了国家伤害数据和其他研究中关于青年枪支暴力差异的程度和影响的发现。
枪支暴力的负担在性别、种族、地点、发展阶段以及杀人或自杀意图的交叉点上差异显著。黑人男孩和青年(15-24 岁)的枪支凶杀率处于异常水平——比任何其他人口群体、发展阶段或暴力意图的比率都高出许多倍,尤其是在城市环境中。最近的研究已经将结构性种族主义付诸实践,并将历史上种族化的空间视为造成这一差异的根源。相比之下,在农村地区,发现了较高的枪支自杀率,在原住民和白人男孩和青年中;枪支相关的文化态度和性别社会化是解释这些差异的考虑因素。我们强调了基于研究的青年枪支暴力预防干预措施,并强调了针对结构性和社会文化因素的努力中的差距。
迫切需要更加关注减少黑人男孩和青年中的枪支凶杀以及原住民和农村白人男孩和青年中的枪支自杀,这有可能大幅降低美国整体枪支暴力率。