Mitigating the Detrimental Effect of Racial Discrimination: Social Support, Ethnic Identity & Racial/Ethnic Socialization in the Family November 13, 2018.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Explaining Race Differences in Student Behavior: The Relative Contribution of Student, Peer, and School Characteristics Clara G. Muschkin* and Audrey N.
Advertisements

University as Entrepreneur A POPULATION IN THIRDS Arizona and National Data.
The Influence of Parent Education on Child Outcomes: The Mediating Role of Parents Beliefs and Behaviors Pamela E. Davis-Kean University of Michigan This.
Social and Personality Development in Early Childhood
Culture and Mental Health How culture affects psychological health.
1 Family Sociology Race, Ethnicity, & Families. 2 Race, Ethnicity & Families How do we define race? How do we define ethnicity?
Creating Racial Equity in Child Welfare: What Do We Know? Judith Meltzer, CSSP Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative Fall Convening November 16, 2010.
Self Competence and Depressive Symptoms in Ethnic Minority Students: The Role of Ethnic Identity and School Belonging Praveena Gummadam and Laura D. Pittman.
Disentangling the Relations between Discrimination, Cultural Orientation, Social Support, and Coping in Mexican American Adolescents Megan O’Donnell Mark.
Ethnic Identity among Mexican American Adolescents: The Role of Maternal Cultural Values and Parenting Practices 1 Miriam M. Martinez, 1 Gustavo Carlo,
Maternal Romantic Relationship Quality, Parenting Stress and Child Outcomes: A Mediational Model Christine R. Keeports, Nicole J. Holmberg, & Laura D.
CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT AND ADOLESCENT ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR: Romantic Relationship Quality as Moderator Susaye S. Rattigan, M.A. & Manfred H.M. van Dulmen,
The Health Consequences of Incarceration Michael Massoglia Penn State University.
Against the Grain: Adolescent Help-Seeking as a Path to Adult Functional Independence Introduction David E. Szwedo David E. Szwedo 1,2,
Grandparent Social Support: Links to Socio-emotional and Academic Functioning Among Late Adolescents Adeya Richmond Laura D. Pittman Sandra Yu Rueger Northern.
BECOMING AN ADULT Transition to Adulthood Continued…
Does Parenting Prevent Hopelessness in Low-Income Youth? Christy Thai, Meredith Henry, Sylvie Mrug Introduction Sample Measures Analysis Results Conclusions.
Method Introduction Discussion Participants: Data came from Waves I and II of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). The analysis.
 Participants’ reported on their demographic information, including gender, age, family standard of living, and ethnicity.  Experiences of discrimination.
Deep Dyadic Friendships vs. Broad Peer Preference During Adolescence as Predictors of Adolescent and Adult Internalizing Symptoms Rachel K. Narr & Joseph.
Introduction Results Method Conclusions
USU Student Climate for Diversity
Investigating the Associations Between Childhood Experience and
American Scorecard: Special Populations
Bruce B. Cohen, PhD Massachusetts Department of Public Health
Mesfin S. Mulatu, Ph.D., M.P.H. The MayaTech Corporation
Texas Pediatric Society Electronic Poster Contest
Rabia Khalaila, RN, MPH, PHD Director, Department of Nursing
American Scorecard: Special Populations
Parental Alcoholism and Adolescent Depression?
Ana Progovac, PhD1,2,3 Benjamin Lê Cook, PhD MPH 1,2
Relation of Maternal Support and Maternal Stress to Children’s Behavior Problems in African American Families Resa F. Matthew, Ph.D. JBS International,
How Does Culture Affect Latino College Students’ Mental Health?
Maternal Demographics
Aggression Types as Predictors of Adolescent Substance Use
Chapter 13 Gender.
H azardous Drinking, Drinking Expectancies And Risky Sexual Behaviors In A Community Sample Of Adult Sexual Minority Women 33rd Annual Research.
This research was supported by NIAAA K01AA
Chapter Four The Social Work Environment
National Academy of Neuropsychology
Friendship Quality as a Moderator
Introduction Results Hypotheses Discussion Method
Participants and Procedures
Self-discrepancies in the Social Role of Mother: Associations between Self-discrepancies and Negative Affect Nicole J. Holmberg, Laura D. Pittman, Emily.
The process and implications of cultural change
THE CHANGING AMERICAN SOCIETY: SUBCULTURES
Travis Wright, Ed.D April 26, 2018
Key Cross-National and Cross-Cultural Risk Factors for Offending
To obtain a copy of this poster, please visit
The process and implications of cultural change
Being Prepared, Getting in Trouble and Other Student Misbehaviors: A Comparison of Immigrants and the Native-Born Stephanie Ewert Department of Sociology.
Introduction Results Methods Conclusions
Introduction Results Methods Conclusions
Negotiating Adolescence: The Importance of Close Relationships for Dismissing Adolescents J. Claire Stephenson, Nell N. Manning, Dave E. Szwedo & Joseph.
Does Adolescent Attachment Security Have Long-term Implications for Functioning in Adulthood? Leah Grande, Joseph S. Tan, Joseph P. Allen, & Alison Nagel.
University of Virginia1 & James Madison University2
Introduction Results Hypotheses Discussion Method
Introduction Results Conclusions Hypotheses Method
Mortality Trends and Differentials by Nativity in the United States
Chapter 7 Public Opinion
Laura M. Sylke & David E. Szwedo James Madison University Introduction
7.2 Factors that Influence Youth Culture
Prosocial Behaviors in Adolescence
Korey F. Beckwith & David E. Szwedo James Madison University
Kristin E. Gross & David E. Szwedo James Madison University
Puberty Moderates Effects of the Parent-Child Relationship on
Overview of Health Disparities in Aging And Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias Carolina Center on Alzheimer’s Disease and Minority Research (CCARMR)
An analysis of self-reported racism and BMI
DISCUSSION (continued)
Arely M. Hurtado1,2, Phillip D. Akutsu2, & Deanna L. Stammer1
Presentation transcript:

Mitigating the Detrimental Effect of Racial Discrimination: Social Support, Ethnic Identity & Racial/Ethnic Socialization in the Family November 13, 2018 Michael M. Davis Lecture Series The Center for Health Administration Studies (CHAS), UChicago Yoonsun Choi, Ph.D., Associate Professor & Michael Park, Ph.D. Candidate, School of Social Service Administration, UChicago The study is supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD, R01 HD073200).

Asian American Paradox Youth outcomes tend to co-occur. Antisocial behaviors are positively correlated with mental distress, which also increases substance use. Youth mental distress are often expressed in acting out behaviors. The developmental outcomes of Asian Americans are mixed with less externalizing problems (e.g., substance uses, antisocial behaviors), good grades, but high internalizing problems (e.g., mental distress).

Why? Factors derived from race/ethnicity, culture and immigration may explain the paradox. That is, the experience of growing up in an immigrant family & as a racial/ethnic minority may be related to the paradox. Explicit and blatant racism triggers anger but implicit & structural racism produces mental distress. The negative impact of racial discrimination is lasting.

Divided Socio-Political Climate Race and immigration are at the center of politics today. Surge in overt racism Dramatic increase in hate crimes White nationalism: From fringe to the center stage Hostility, fear-mongering and xenophobia Overt/covert legislative and judicial racism Many thought that it is post-racial society. Structural, implicit racism continues. In fact, due to blatant and overt racism, structural & implicit racism are overlooked or downplayed.

Evidence of Perpetual Racism Exacerbating social, economic & political inequality by race/ethnicity Income gap is the largest among Asian Americans. Continued disparity in health, mental health and educational gaps among children Disproportionate representation of Black and Latinx in the justice system Asian Americans remain invisible: “Asians don’t count.” Filipino Americans: The invisible among the invisible Espenshade & Radford (2009) “No longer separate, not yet equal”

Unique Positionality of Asian American “Model Minority” & “Honorary Whites” Problem free, hard working, self-care This seemingly positive stereotype is coupled with negative ones. “Perpetual Foreigner” Regarded as a foreigner regardless of nativity and generation “Caught in the Middle” Middle-man minority theory (Min, 1996), racial triangulation theory (C.J. Kim, 1999) Asian American youth report the highest rate of peer harassment, racial discrimination by both majority and other minority youth.

Mitigating the Detrimental Effect Social support Instrumental and emotional support From family, peers, schools and community Racial/ethnic socialization in the family With a goal of strengthening ethnic identity/pride Cultural socialization, promotion of mistrust & preparation of bias Experience of racial discrimination influences racial/ethnic socialization in the family.

Filipino- vs. Korean Americans Mixed pattern of acculturation among parents Either end of acculturation spectrum among parents: English speaking, most acculturated Filipino parents (in regard to occupation, residential and ethnic identity) vs. limited-English speaking, least acculturated (almost separated) Korean parents However, Filipino families uphold traditional familism and other traditional family values more so than Korean families (e.g., family obligation, gendered norms) (Choi et al., 2017). Youth show more similarity than the parent generation. (Choi et al., 2018; under review) Growing up Asian Americans with bicultural identity Divergent and convergent developmental outcomes

Midwest Longitudinal Study of Asian American Families (ML-SAAF) Midwest families with an adolescent child ages between 12 and 17 in 2014, whose mother is of Filipino and Korean heritage Wave 1 in 2014-2015: N=1,580: 379 Filipino American youth & 377 parents (365 dyads), 410 Korean American youth and 414 parents (407 dyads), Wave 2 in 2016 (76% retention), Wave 3 in 2018 (86% of Wave 1 retention). In Wave 1, in-person interview (84%) by bilingual interviewers; multilingual survey available but 8% of youth used heritage language versions. Self-admin in later waves.

Samples Mean ages: 15.28 (SD=1.89) for FA, 14.76 (SD=1.91) for KA youth About equal gender distribution in both groups 71% FA and 58.29% KA U.S.-born Among foreign-born, average years of living in U.S. were 8.47 (SD=4.24) for FA, 8.13 (SD=4.28) for KA Parent Participants: Primary caretakers were mothers (92.02% FA, 95.65% KA), foreign-born (90.43% FA, 98.55% KA), living in US on average for 21.38 years (SD=11.01) for FA, 16.04 years (SD=8.53) for KA, college educated (88.56% FA, 83.09% KA), married (88.56% FA, 92.03% KA) and employed (87.23% FA, 64.69% KA mothers)

Two Sets of Analyses How different types of social support (i.e., emotional and instrumental) moderate the negative impact of perceived racial discrimination on Asian American youth development Mediating process of racial/ethnic socialization between the experience of racial discrimination and bicultural identities among Asian American youth

Study 1: Moderation by Social Support Authors: Park, M., Choi, Y., Henly, J. & Noh, S. Examines (1) the relationship between racial discrimination and youth developmental outcomes (GPA and depressive symptoms), (2) whether the relationship is moderated by two distinct types of social support and (3) whether the moderating effect vary by nativity (a place of birth)

Social support Social support refers to a broad range of resources that are transferred across social relationships (Thoits, 2011). Empirical evidence shows that social support can enhance, directly or by buffering, youth development.

Types of Social support Emotional support may be sought by distressed individuals to cope with negative feelings. Instrumental support may be sought by individuals in need of tangible assistance (such as financial support) with a stressful situation.

Moderating Effects Problem-focused coping vs. emotion-focused coping (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984) Coping research has shown that problem-focused coping was generally more adaptive, while emotion-focused coping is more likely to be maladaptive on an array of outcomes. This may be more complex than we think (Lazarus & Folkman, 1988). The stress-alleviating effect of problem-focused coping was amplified among the more acculturated (Noh and Kaspar, 2003). Emotion-based coping had a stress-alleviating effect among individuals with high support from co-ethnic group.

Gaps in Literature The expansive social support literature has largely neglected Asian American youth. Limited investigation on differential roles of emotional and instrumental support in stress-moderating relationships Limited attention on whether and how nativity status may shape the operation of social support as a coping resource.

Analyses Youth outcomes: Depressive symptoms and GPA Adversity: Perceived racial discrimination Social support: Emotional vs. instrumental Concurrent, longitudinal models Concurrent: W1 predictors regressed on W1 outcomes Longitudinal: W1 predictors regressed on W2 outcomes Longitudinal accounting for prior outcome: W1 predictors + W1 outcomes regressed on W2 outcomes

Hierarchical Regression Step 1 [Demographics (Ethnicity, nativity, gender, household income, age) + racial discrimination + emotional support + instrumental support] Step 2 (Model 1 + Racial discrimination X two types of social support) Step 3 (Model 2 + Racial discrimination X two types of social support X nativity)

Hierarchical Regression (Main Effects)

Hierarchical Regression (Interactions)

Results (Main Effects) Racial discrimination predicts more depressive symptoms and lower GPA. The negative impact is most evident on mental health, both concurrent and longitudinal. The impact remains after accounting for prior level of depressive symptoms. Its impact is significant and concurrent on GPA. Emotional and instrumental support reduces youth depressive symptoms, concurrently and/or longitudinally.

Results (Two-way Interactions) The impact and direction of emotional and instrumental support vary by the level of racial discrimination. Emotional support worsens the relationship between racial discrimination and depressive symptoms but instrumental support mitigates it. Instrumental support alleviates the impact of racial discrimination on GPA. Emotional support did not show a significant buffering impact on GPA.

Results (Three-way Interactions) Emotional support mitigates the negative impact of racial discrimination on GPA among foreign-born youth. Instrumental support mitigates the negative impact of racial discrimination on GPA among U.S.-born youth

Results (Three-way Interaction) Emotional Support & GPA

Results (Three-way Interaction) Instrumental Support & GPA

Results (Three-way Interactions)

Highlights/Implications Persistent & negative impact of perceived racial discrimination on youth development, especially on mental health Social support is not universally positive but, rather, conditional depending on the types of social support and outcome. Potential subgroup difference by nativity. Additional analyses are being conducted by gender and ethnicity.

Study 2: Mediation of Racial/ethnic Socialization in the Family Authors: Woo, B., Maglalang, D.D., Ko, S., Choi, Y., Park, M., Takeuchi, D. Examines the mechanisms in which the experience of racial discrimination influences racial/ethnic socialization in the family, which may facilitate/hinder the development of bicultural identities SEM analyses using the bootstrapping and ML with missing values approach Wave 1 independent and mediating variables predicting Wave 2 youth bicultural identity; By ethnic groups

- Filipino Model Youth + Youth Ethnic Identity Promotion of mistrust + Youth Ethnic Identity Youth R/E discrimination Preparation of bias + - + + Parental Promotion of mistrust + + Parental R/E discrimination Preparation of bias Youth American Identity + + + Concern about children’s minority status Covariates: wave 1 youth ethnic & American identity wave 1 parental ethnic & American identity youth sex and age, parental SES Chi2 (55)=64.308, p>.05; RMSEA=0.021; CFI=0.980

Youth R/E discrimination + Korean Model Youth Promotion of mistrust + Youth Ethnic Identity Youth R/E discrimination Preparation of bias + + + Parental Promotion of mistrust + Parental R/E discrimination + Preparation of bias Youth American Identity + Concern about children’s minority status Covariates: wave 1 youth ethnic & American identity wave 1 parental ethnic & American identity youth sex and age, parental SES Chi2 (55)=56.159, p>.05; RMSEA=0.007; CFI=0.997

Results Experiences of racial discrimination are fully mediated by racial/ethnic socialization. Racial discrimination in Wave 1 did not predict bicultural identity in Wave 2 but was associated with racial/ethnic socialization in the family, which in turn longitudinally influenced ethnic identity (not American identity). Subgroup differences Racial discrimination was mediated, by increasing promotion of mistrust and concerns about minority status among Filipino families and increasing preparation for bias among Korean families.

Highlights/Implications When parents experience racial discrimination, it reinforces a racial/ethnic socialization in the family. However, the ways in which racial/ethnic socialization longitudinally influences ethnic identity vary across the subgroups. Promotion of mistrust, relative to preparation for bias or increased concern about children’s minority status, may in fact weaken ethnic identity.