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Journal Article

Citation

Henry JS, Lambert SF, Smith Bynum M. J. Fam. Psychol. 2015; 29(4): 548-557.

Affiliation

Department of Family Science, University of Maryland, College Park.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1037/fam0000135

PMID

26374933

Abstract

Urban African American youth's disproportionate exposure to community violence and increased risk for its adverse consequences have heightened interest in identifying protective factors that mitigate the effects of community violence exposure for these youth. Thus, the present study examined whether maternal racial socialization messages protect African American adolescents against the adverse effects of community violence exposure. Participants were a community sample of African American adolescents (N = 106; mean age = 15.41 years) and their female guardians. For community-violence-exposed youth, maternal racial socialization messages protected against aggressive behaviors and depressive symptoms, such that maternal messages about cultural pride attenuated the association between community violence exposure and parent-reported aggressive behaviors, and cultural appreciation of legacy messages attenuated the association between community violence exposure and adolescent-reported depressive symptoms.

FINDINGS highlight the need to integrate race-relevant factors into preventive interventions targeting African American youth at risk for or exposed to community violence, and suggest that family interventions promoting parents' efficacy to implement racial socialization practices are useful for youth exposed to violence. (PsycINFO Database Record


Language: en

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