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Journal Article

Citation

Kulkarni SJ, Porter AM, Mennick A, Gil-Rivas V. J. Prim. Prev. 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Blvd, Charlotte, NC, 28223, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s10935-019-00565-0

PMID

31571031

Abstract

Teen dating violence (TDV) is a serious public health issue associated with negative physical and behavior outcomes that disproportionately impact African-American adolescents. Despite the emergence of effective TDV prevention strategies, more knowledge is needed about how African American adolescents understand healthy and unhealthy relationships. Adolescents' analysis of media representations can provide important insight into social norms around adolescent romantic relationships, which can inform the development of TDV prevention strategies. We conducted nine focus groups (n = 86) to explore perceptions of healthy and unhealthy relationships and the influence of media representations on romantic relationships. We transcribed focus group interviews verbatim and coded them line by line. Participants were primarily African American (90%), female (67%), and high school aged (13-17 years). Consistent with other studies, participants reported significant engagement across traditional and social media platforms that exposed them to a wide variety of fictional, celebrity, and peer relationships. A modified constructivist grounded theory analytic approach produced four major relationship themes: commitment, authenticity, privacy, and maturity. These themes captured participants' reflections about romantic relationships and how the media interact with relationship processes and perceptions.

RESULTS show that adolescents are using media representations of romantic couples to clarify their own romantic relationship expectations and desires. Future prevention strategies should support youths' use of critical thinking, perspective taking, and analysis to help align their relationship choices and expectations with their own values and preferences.


Language: en

Keywords

African American adolescents; Healthy relationships; Media literacy; Social media; Teen dating violence; Violence prevention

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