Christophe N Keita, Desmarais Ariane, Kiang Lisa, Jones Shawn C T, Stein Gabriela L, Stevenson Howard C, Anderson Riana E
Department of Psychology, McGill University.
Department of Psychology, Wake Forest University.
Am J Orthopsychiatry. 2024;94(6):668-680. doi: 10.1037/ort0000752. Epub 2024 Apr 4.
Parents of color's critical consciousness development (understanding of and actions to redress societal inequalities) is an important yet understudied area, especially relative to the burgeoning literature on youth's critical consciousness development. As with youth of color, ethnic-racial identity, or the meaning and importance placed on one's ethnic-racial group membership, likely plays a notable yet complex role in parents' critical consciousness. Specifically, parents' participation in activities that engage them in the culture of their racial-ethnic group (exploration), the importance they place on race-ethnicity (centrality), and their perceptions of how society views their group (public regard) may each be differentially associated with understanding of inequalities (critical reflection), motivation toward ending inequalities (critical motivation), and the behaviors parents engage in to address inequalities (critical action). Further, it is possible that associations may vary across racial-ethnic groups given different sociocultural histories, experiences (including immigrant experiences), and positionality within the United States. In the present study, we employ multigroup structural equation modeling among a sample of 203 Black, 193 Asian American, and 188 Latinx parents (total = 584, = 44.46, = 2.49, 59.6% mothers) of an adolescent child between the ages of 13 and 17 to examine associations between ethnic-racial identity and critical consciousness across groups. Results indicate highly complex, group-specific relations between identity and critical consciousness: public regard was most consistently predictive of critical consciousness dimensions among Black parents. Exploration and centrality were most predictive among Asian American and Latinx parents, respectively. Implications for relations between ethnic-racial identity and critical consciousness in light of different group experiences are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
有色人种父母的批判性意识发展(对社会不平等的认识及纠正这些不平等的行动)是一个重要但研究不足的领域,特别是相对于新兴的关于青少年批判性意识发展的文献而言。与有色人种青少年一样,族裔-种族认同,即对个人所属族裔-种族群体的意义和重要性的认知,可能在父母的批判性意识中发挥显著而复杂的作用。具体而言,父母参与使其融入其种族-族裔群体文化的活动(探索)、他们对种族-族裔的重视程度(核心地位)以及他们对社会如何看待其群体的认知(公众评价),可能分别与对不平等的理解(批判性反思)、消除不平等的动机(批判性动机)以及父母为解决不平等而采取的行为(批判性行动)存在不同程度的关联。此外,鉴于不同的社会文化历史、经历(包括移民经历)以及在美国的地位,这些关联在不同种族-族裔群体中可能会有所不同。在本研究中,我们对203名黑人、193名亚裔美国人和188名拉丁裔父母(共584名,平均年龄 = 44.46岁,标准差 = 2.49,59.6%为母亲)进行了多组结构方程建模,这些父母的孩子年龄在13至17岁之间,以检验不同群体中族裔-种族认同与批判性意识之间的关联。结果表明,认同与批判性意识之间存在高度复杂的、特定群体的关系:公众评价在黑人父母中最能持续预测批判性意识维度。探索和核心地位分别在亚裔美国人和拉丁裔父母中最具预测性。我们讨论了根据不同群体经历,族裔-种族认同与批判性意识之间关系的意义。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》(c)2024美国心理学会,保留所有权利)