Nair Nisha, Good Deborah Cain
Katz Graduate School of Business, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 May 26;18(11):5676. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18115676.
Microaggressions can have damaging health impacts on minority groups experiencing exclusion through such forms of discrimination and bias. Using focus groups of different marginalized groups and through in-depth interviewing, we analyze the ways in which marginalized identities respond to and deal with microaggressions and highlight some relevant linkages to mentoring. Through a qualitative analysis of microaggression experiences, along the lines of race, gender, sexual orientation, and religion, we explore different coping mechanisms and potential linkages to mentoring. Our results indicate some underlying patterns of sense-making, categorized as coping by (a) resisting or reclaiming their voice, (b) retreating, reframing, or withdrawing, (c) rejecting or stonewalling, (d) restraining and internalizing, (e) seeking support and reconnecting (with safe spaces), and (f) redoubling (effort). For each of the coping strategies discussed, we also identify and advance mentoring linkages in the context of coping with microaggressions.
微侵犯会对那些因这种歧视和偏见形式而遭受排斥的少数群体产生有害的健康影响。通过不同边缘化群体的焦点小组并借助深入访谈,我们分析了边缘化身份群体回应和应对微侵犯的方式,并突出了一些与指导相关的联系。通过沿着种族、性别、性取向和宗教等维度对微侵犯经历进行定性分析,我们探索了不同的应对机制以及与指导的潜在联系。我们的结果表明了一些潜在的意义建构模式,可归类为以下应对方式:(a)抵制或重新找回自己的声音;(b)退缩、重新构建或退出;(c)拒绝或冷漠对待;(d)克制并内化;(e)寻求支持并重新建立联系(与安全空间);以及(f)加倍努力。对于所讨论的每种应对策略,我们还在应对微侵犯的背景下确定并推进指导联系。