Literature DB >> 16351416

Crafting identities and accessing opportunities post-Brown.

Margaret Beale Spencer1.   

Abstract

Decades following Brown v. Board of Education (1954), issues regarding the effects of skin color, poverty, and racial differences in the availability of protective factors persist. For a multiethnic sample of mainly African American (56%), female (69%), and high-achieving (65%) youths, a dual-axis model of vulnerability is used to compare four groups of youths identified as high, masked, low, and undetermined vulnerability on the basis of the presence of risk and protective factors. Risks included level of poverty, number of parents in home, and skin-color pigmentation. Protective factors included youths' perceptions of school climate, parental monitoring, and consonance between skin pigmentation and preferred skin color. The author suggests that 50 years post-Brown, issues concerning White privilege, color stereotyping, power discrepancies, and economic disparities maintain "invisible" and persistent hurdles for vulnerable youths who vary on available protective factors. Findings confirm the impact of vulnerability on psychosocial and achievement outcomes. Copyright (c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16351416     DOI: 10.1037/0003-066X.60.8.821

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Psychol        ISSN: 0003-066X


  7 in total

1.  The influence of cognitive development and perceived racial discrimination on the psychological well-being of African American youth.

Authors:  Eleanor K Seaton
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2009-07-19

2.  The moderating capacity of racial identity between perceived discrimination and psychological well-being over time among African American youth.

Authors:  Eleanor K Seaton; Enrique W Neblett; Rachel D Upton; Wizdom Powell Hammond; Robert M Sellers
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2011-09-28

3.  Building the Transdisciplinary Resistance Collective for Research and Policy: Implications for Dismantling Structural Racism as a Determinant of Health Inequity.

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Journal:  Ethn Dis       Date:  2020-07-09       Impact factor: 1.847

4.  Racial discrimination and racial socialization as predictors of African American adolescents' racial identity development using latent transition analysis.

Authors:  Eleanor K Seaton; Tiffany Yip; Antonio Morgan-Lopez; Robert M Sellers
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2011-08-29

5.  Early Life Racial Discrimination, Racial Centrality, and Allostatic Load Among African American Older Adults.

Authors:  Courtney S Thomas Tobin; Ángela Gutiérrez; Caryn N Bell; Roland J Thorpe
Journal:  Gerontologist       Date:  2022-05-26

6.  "I Do But I Don't": The Search for Identity in Urban African American Adolescents.

Authors:  Rebecca Lakin Gullan; Beth Necowitz Hoffman; Stephen S Leff
Journal:  Penn GSE Perspect Urban Educ       Date:  2011

7.  A longitudinal examination of racial identity and racial discrimination among African American adolescents.

Authors:  Eleanor K Seaton; Tiffany Yip; Robert M Sellers
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2009 Mar-Apr
  7 in total

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