School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2024 Oct 1;79(10). doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbae143.
Older adults' civic participation has received considerable attention. However, this literature has understudied the experiences of civic participation among minoritized ethnoracial older adults. Particularly absent from this literature is the contextualization of civic participation as it exists within cultural and historical structures of inequality that influence how these populations understand, participate, and experience civic life.
A phenomenological design was used to explore civic participation through participants' experiences and unique perspectives. Thirty-four in-depth, semistructured interviews were conducted with Latine immigrant and Black older adults (ages 60+) living in New Jersey and New York City. A conceptual content analysis was used to identify how older Black and Latine immigrant adults define civic participation for themselves.
This study presents 3 new definitions of civic participation, that are derived directly from participants' conceptualization and applied across the lived experiences. Definitions present civic participation as the responsibility of community belonging; as a religious/spiritual practice; and as a way of life. These definitions provide new perspectives by which to study civic participation and challenge current framing of helper and needy, altruism, the voluntary nature of participation, and the separation between social, political, and spiritual participation.
Findings from this study contribute to expanding gerontology's ontological imagination of how civic participation is experienced and conceptualized among older Latine immigrants and Black adults. The expertise shared by older African Americans and Latine immigrants lends us important perspectives to develop a critical theoretical framework by which scholars can more accurately study civic participation among this diverse population.
老年人的公民参与受到了相当多的关注。然而,这一文献对少数族裔老年公民参与的经历研究不足。特别是在公民参与的背景下,这些文献没有考虑到文化和历史不平等结构对这些群体理解、参与和体验公民生活的影响。
采用现象学设计,通过参与者的经验和独特视角来探索公民参与。在新泽西州和纽约市,对 34 名拉丁裔移民和黑人老年人(60 岁以上)进行了深入的半结构化访谈。采用概念内容分析法,确定黑人和拉丁裔老年移民成年人如何为自己定义公民参与。
本研究提出了公民参与的 3 个新定义,这些定义直接来自参与者的概念化,并应用于他们的生活经历。定义将公民参与视为社区归属感的责任;作为一种宗教/精神实践;以及一种生活方式。这些定义提供了新的视角来研究公民参与,并挑战了当前关于帮助者和有需要者、利他主义、参与的自愿性质以及社会、政治和精神参与之间的分离的框架。
本研究的结果有助于扩展老年学对拉丁裔移民和黑人老年人体验和概念化公民参与的本体想象力。美国非裔老年人和拉丁裔移民所分享的专业知识为我们提供了重要的视角,以制定一个批判性的理论框架,使学者们能够更准确地研究这一多样化群体的公民参与。