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“Don't let anybody ever put you down culturally…. it's not good…”: Creating spaces for Blak women's healing Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Paola Balla, Karen Jackson, Amy F Quayle, Christopher C Sonn, Rowena K Price
Research has highlighted the importance of Indigenous knowledge and cultural practice in healing from ongoing histories of trauma, dispossession, and displacement for Indigenous peoples in Australia and elsewhere. Connection with culture, Country, and kinship has been identified as protective factors for Aboriginal social and emotional well-being and as facilitating cultural healing. This paper draws
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An evaluation of a rapid conversion to teleSANE in response to COVID-19 Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Jessica Shaw, Hannah Feeney, Joan Meunier-Sham, Karen Hazard, Pamela Plante, Randi Petricone
Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANEs) provide expert, comprehensive medical forensic care to patients who present for services following a sexual assault. Because SANEs are not consistently available, telehealth technology is being explored as a means to provide access to this expert care (i.e., teleSANE). During the COVID-19 pandemic, teleSANE offered additional potential benefits by reducing the
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Supporting immigrant caregivers during the COVID-19 pandemic: Continuous adaptation and implementation of an early childhood digital engagement program Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Natalia M. Rojas, Julie Katter, Ran Tian, Jacqueline Montesdeoca, Camila Caycedo, Bonnie D. Kerker
Digital messaging programs have the potential to be a powerful, low-cost, technological tool to support multiple facets of caregivers' knowledge, and implementation of developmentally appropriate caregiver-child activities among diverse immigrant populations. However, involving caregivers and community stakeholders in the cultural and linguistic tailoring of interventions to optimize utilization and
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The intersection of immigration policy impacts and COVID-19 for Latinx young adults Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Carmen R. Valdez, Ashley A. Walsdorf, Kevin M. Wagner, V. Nelly Salgado de Snyder, Deliana Garcia, Alice P. Villatoro
For many Latinx young adults, COVID-19 has exposed exclusionary policies that heighten risk for contracting the virus and that leave them and their parents unprotected. This study has a dual purpose; first, to quantitatively examine immigration policy impacts of discrimination, isolation, threats to family, and vulnerability, and their association to economic consequences experienced by Latinx young
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Pride in our community: Reflecting on LGBTQ publications in the American Journal of Community Psychology Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Allyson M. Blackburn, Nathan R. Todd
In this Virtual Special Issue (VSI), we curate and discuss a set of 28 articles previously published in the American Journal of Community Psychology (AJCP) focused on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) communities. The purpose of this VSI is to bring visibility to this body of scholarship in AJCP and to reflect on how the strengths of our field have been used throughout this work
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Journey to wellness: A socioecological analysis of veterans in recovery from substance use disorders Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-07-18 Simone P. Grisamore, Rebecca L. Nguyen, Elzbieta K. Wiedbusch, Mayra Guerrero, Carlie E. A. Cope, Mary G. Abo, Leonard A. Jason
Substance use disorders are increasingly prevalent among veterans in the United States. Veterans in recovery face unique challenges, such as high rates of psychiatric comorbidities, difficulties adjusting to civilian life, and inadequate housing and mental health services. While prior research has explored veterans' experiences in recovery, studies have not implemented a multilevel perspective in their
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Implementation beyond the clinic: Community-driven utilization of research evidence from PC CARES, a suicide prevention program Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-06-28 Lauren A. White, Lisa Wexler, Addie Weaver, Roberta Moto, Tanya Kirk, Suzanne Rataj, Lucas Trout, Diane McEachern
While implementation and dissemination of research is a rapidly growing area, critical questions remain about how, why, and under what conditions everyday people integrate and utilize research evidence. This mixed-methods study investigates how participants of Promoting Community Conversations About Research to End Suicide (PC CARES) make sense of and use research evidence about suicide prevention
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Sense of community improves community participation in Chinese residential communities: The mediating role of sense of community responsibility and prosocial tendencies Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-06-28 Xiangshu Deng, Zhenyu Wei, Chunfang Tu, Yujuan Yin
Community participation is essential for community development and enhancing quality of life. Several studies have focused on the relationship between sense of community (SOC) and community participation in organizational settings. Guided by the community experiences framework, this study aims to examine how a SOC improves community participation in Chinese residential communities. Moreover, the study
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Community resilience to crime: A study of the 2011 Brisbane flood Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-06-28 Rebecca Wickes, Renee Zahnow, Jonathan Corcoran, Anthony Kimpton
Understanding and enhancing community resilience is a global priority as societies encounter a rising number of extreme weather events. Given that these events are typically both sudden and unexpected, community resilience is typically examined after the disaster so there can be no before and after comparisons. As such, the extent to which existing community capacities buffer the effects of a traumatic
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Perceived safety in community and service settings among young adults experiencing homelessness: Differences by sexual and gender identity Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-06-16 Graham DiGuiseppi, Sara Semborski, Harmony Rhoades, Jeremy Goldbach, Benjamin F. Henwood
Homelessness poses risks to the health and safety of young adults; particularly among sexual and gender minority (SGM) young adults. The current study sought to better understand service use and perceived safety in community and service settings among SGM and cisgender heterosexual (cis-hetero) young adults experiencing homelessness. Data come from a mixed-method, ecological momentary assessment study
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Fostering and sustaining transnational solidarities for transformative social change: Advancing community psychology research and action Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-06-16 Christopher C. Sonn, Rachael Fox, Samuel Keast, Mohi Rua
As we planned this special issue, the world was in the midst of a pandemic, one which brought into sharp focus many of the pre-existing economic, social, and climate crises, as well as, trends of widening economic and social inequalities. The pandemic also brought to the forefront an epistemic crisis that continues to decentre certain knowledges while maintaining the hegemony of Eurocentric ways of
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Mentoring and depressive symptoms of youth: Examining prospective and interactive associations with mentoring relationship quality Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-06-15 Rebecca Browne, G. Roger Jarjoura, Thomas E. Keller, Manolya Tanyu, Carla Herrera, Sarah E. O. Schwartz
A significant body of research has demonstrated that mentoring relationships support positive youth development. The quality of the mentoring relationship has been identified as a predictor of positive youth outcomes. However, limited research has examined how engagement in a mentoring program may be related to youth depressive symptoms specifically. The current study utilized a sample of 2003 youth
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Reflecting and rejuvenating our work, together: One team's consideration of AJCP publications on gender-based violence Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-06-14 Nkiru Nnawulezi, Agnes Rieger, Jessica Shaw, Megan Greeson, Lauren Lichty, Nicole E. Allen
Community psychology has long valued reflexive praxis as a critical part advancing our research and action. In this Virtual Special Issue (VSI), we, a group of community psychologists and gender-based violence (GBV) researchers at many different points in our careers, reflected on GBV publications that have appeared in AJCP. We examine the ways in which community psychology broadly and articles in
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Partnering with immigrant families to promote language justice and equity in education Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-05-27 Catalina Tang Yan, Angélica Bachour, Consuelo J. Pérez, Loreto P. Ansaldo, Diana Santiago, Yichen Jin, Zihui Li, Yu S. Mok, Yanyi Weng, Linda S. Martinez
Despite US federal legislation mandates institutions to provide meaningful access and participation to students and families in educational settings, culturally and linguistically diverse (CLD) families and caregivers of children in special education experience cultural and linguistic barriers. A Community Advisory Team (CAT) of parents, advocates, community interpreters and translators, researchers
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Facilitating connection to enhance college student well-being: Evaluation of an experiential group program Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Meghan A. Costello, Alison G. Nagel, Gabrielle L. Hunt, Ariana J. Rivens, Olivia A. Hazelwood, Corey Pettit, Joseph P. Allen
This randomized controlled trial examined the impact of The Connection Project, an experiential, relationship-focused intervention designed to improve school belongingness and decrease symptoms of depression and loneliness among new college students. Participants were 438 first-year and transfer students (232 treatment, 206 waitlist-control) at a medium-sized, 4years, predominantly White public university
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The Achieved Capabilities Questionnaire for Community Mental Health (ACQ-CMH): A consumer-based measure for the evaluation of community mental health interventions Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Beatrice Sacchetto, José Ornelas, Maria M. Calheiros
The capabilities approach offers a multidimensional, ecological, and agent-centered framework that may inspire models of intervention and evaluation. A growing number of measures grounded on the capabilities approach for outcome measurement are appearing. Regarding community mental health, new consumer-valued measures—constructed in collaboration with consumers—are here considered crucial for a transformative
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Patterns of community violence exposure among urban adolescents and their associations with adjustment Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-04-28 Sarah K. Pittman, Albert D. Farrell
Community violence exposure is prevalent among urban and marginalized adolescents. Although there is strong evidence that community violence exposure is associated with negative consequences, prior studies and theories suggest that these associations may differ as a function of specific characteristics of exposure. This study identified patterns of community violence exposure that differed in form
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A scoping review of youth advisory structures in the United States: Applications, outcomes, and best practices Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-04-25 Kristen Haddad, Farrah Jacquez, Lisa Vaughn
Although youth advisory structures (YASs) have proliferated internationally to facilitate the voice of young people, little is known about the practices of such groups, especially in the United States. To address this gap of knowledge, this study describes the findings of a scoping review of scholarly research on YAS in the United States. The review found that although the use of YAS is increasing
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From home to the streets: Can cultural socialization foster Latinx youths' social responsibility? Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 Saraí Blanco Martinez, Bernardette J. Pinetta, Deborah Rivas-Drake
Grassroots movements such as Poder Quince exemplify how Latinx youth intertwine their cultural heritage and traditions with civic action to create positive change within their communities. Parents' cultural socialization messages have been shown to instill cultural pride and encourage prosocial behaviors (e.g., helping others, caring for younger siblings). However, there is a dearth of research on
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Building strength for the long haul toward liberation: What psychology can contribute to the resilience of communities targeted by state-sanctioned violence Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Kris T. Gebhard, Stephanie Hargrove, Tahani Chaudhry, Syeda Y. Buchwach, Lauren B. Cattaneo
State-sanctioned violence (SSV) has resounding effects on entire populations, and marginalized communities have long persisted in the work toward liberation despite continued SSV. This paper aims to bridge the gap between the vast scholarship on resilience and the practical challenge of sustaining and thriving in communities targeted by SSV. We use the theoretical frame of the Transconceptual Model
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Organizing a transnational solidarity for social change through participatory practices: The case of People Powered–Global Hub for Participatory Democracy Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Carolin Hagelskamp, Celina Su, Karla Valverde Viesca, Tarson Núñez
In the context of global democratic crises and pervasive neoliberal policies, civil society organizations (CSOs) play a critical role in promoting democratic processes and advancing social change on local, national, and transnational scales. However, such organizations also (need to) grapple with how they themselves put social justice and democratic principles into practice, and resist coloniality
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Cultural efficacy as a novel component of understanding linkages between culture and mental health in Indigenous communities Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Miigis B. Gonzalez, Kelley J. Sittner, Melissa L. Walls
We used a novel measure of cultural efficacy to examine empirical pathways between enculturation, efficacy, and two wellbeing outcomes. Cultural factors are not consistently linked to better wellbeing in the academic literature despite widespread understanding of these processes in Indigenous communities. Healing pathways is a community-based participatory study with eight reservations/reserves in
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Promoting justice through community-based research: International case studies Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Yolanda Suarez-Balcazar, Fabricio Balcazar, Daniela E. Miranda, Tesania Velazquez, Caterina Arcidiacono, Manuel Garcia-Ramirez
Community-based participatory research (CBPR) approaches to promoting justice focus on working from the ground up and giving a voice to marginalized communities regarding their concerns, potential solutions, and how to address social justice issues that matter to them. The pursuit of justice is often related to efforts to attain personal as well as collective well-being. In this paper, we illustrate
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The stability of youth popular opinion leaders selected over time using social network analysis Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-03-10 Emily A. Waterman, Katie M. Edwards, Antoni B. Keyes, Hafsa Zulfiqar, Victoria L. Banyard, Thomas W. Valente
Community interventions that use social network analysis to identify and involve influential individuals are promising for behavior change. However, youth friendships are often unstable. The current study examined the stability of the youth selected as influential in a friendship social network, that is, the degree to which youth selected at one time point were also selected at subsequent time points
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Bearing witness to structural violence against migrants and envisioning transnational solidarity Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Rakhshanda Saleem, Peiwei Li
Guided by a critical and transnational framework, this qualitative study centers on the perspectives and analyses of activists and organizers working with migrants to the United States who face devastating conditions due to historical and ongoing exploitation of geopolitical powers and structures of violence. Through thematic and reconstructive analyses, we focus on how 18 participants navigate the
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Strategies for monitoring mentoring relationship quality to predict early program dropout Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Michael D. Lyons, Kelly D. Edwards
We examined data from a nationally implemented mentoring program over a 4-year period, to identify demographic and relationship characteristics associated with premature termination. Data were drawn from a sample of 82,224 mentor and mentees. We found matches who reported shared racial or ethnic identities were associated with lower likelihood of premature termination as was mentee's positive feelings
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Re-imagining mental health services for American Indian communities: Centering Indigenous perspectives Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Joseph P. Gone
The Indigenous peoples of North America are heirs to the shattering legacy of European colonization. These brutal histories of land dispossession, military conquest, forced settlement, religious repression, and coercive assimilation have robbed American Indian communities of their economies, lifeways, and sources of meaning and significance in the world. The predictable consequence has been an epidemic
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Native Spirit: Development of a culturally grounded after-school program to promote well-being among American Indian adolescents Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-02-22 Amanda M. Hunter, Mikah Carlos, Velia L. Nuño, Mary Jo Tippeconnic-Fox, Scott Carvajal, Nicole P. Yuan
Culturally grounded after-school programs (ASPs), based on local cultural values and practices, are often developed and implemented by and for the local community. Culturally grounded programs promote health and well-being for American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) adolescents by allowing them to reconnect to cultural teachings that have faced attempted historical and contemporary erasure. This
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Willingness to Engage in Collective Action After the Police Killing of an Unarmed Black Man: Differential Pathways for Black and White Individuals Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-02-15 Brynn E. Sheehan, Valerian J. Derlega, Ralitsa S. Maduro, Delaram A. Totonchi
This cross-sectional survey study examined the underlying psychosocial constructs of Black (n = 163) and White (n = 246) university students' willingness to endorse racially motivated collective action. Consistent with the defensive motivation system model, we expected the police shooting of an unarmed Black American to activate concerns about personal safety, thereby eliciting negative affect, lack
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Informal supports, housing insecurity, and adolescent outcomes: Implications for promoting resilience Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-02-13 Katherine E. Marçal, Kathryn Maguire-Jack
Adolescents in low-income, marginalized families are vulnerable to behavior problems that impede healthy functioning and threaten long-term well-being. Informal supports may fill an important gap for these households as they navigate financial and social stressors. Instrumental support from social networks and neighborhood cohesion may promote family stability and youth well-being; further, these informal
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A storyboarding approach to train school mental health providers and paraprofessionals in the delivery of a strengths-based program for Latinx families affected by maternal depression Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-02-13 Carmen R. Valdez, Kevin M. Wagner, Aaron Stumpf, Martha Saucedo
Mental health professionals in schools and the community are often overburdened and underfunded in high-need areas, limiting their capacity to deliver needed family-based mental health interventions. To address this issue, paraprofessional school personnel (e.g., family engagement liaisons) can facilitate these family-based mental health interventions alongside licensed mental health professionals
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Using a modified version of photovoice in a European cross-national study on homelessness Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-02-09 Marta Gaboardi, Massimo Santinello, Michela Lenzi, Francesca Disperati, José Ornelas, Marybeth Shinn
This study proposes an innovative use of a modified version of photovoice for cross-national qualitative research that allows participants to express their ideas, experiences, and emotions about a topic through photographic language. We examine factors affecting social service providers' work on people experiencing homelessness in Europe. We highlight five advantages of using photovoice in cross-national
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“It's a place to feel like part of the community”: Counterspace, inclusion, and empowerment in a drop-in center for homeless and marginalized women Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-02-07 Erin Toolis, Anjali Dutt, Alexander Wren, Rachel Jackson-Gordon
In the context of rising inequality and eroding safety nets for marginalized communities, research is needed to demonstrate the ways in which settings can facilitate community, agency, and capabilities for low-income women. The purpose of this study is to examine if and how an organizational setting designed to support homeless, low-income, and other marginalized women can facilitate empowering changes
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Longitudinal effects of Youth Empowerment Solutions: Preventing youth aggression and increasing prosocial behavior Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-01-20 Elyse J. Thulin, Dan B. Lee, Andria B. Eisman, Tom M. Reischl, Pete Hutchison, Susan Franzen, Marc A. Zimmerman
Youth violence remains a significant public health problem despite efforts to address it. We describe the evaluation results of Youth Empowerment Solutions (YES), an after-school active learning program implemented by trained local teachers and designed to engage middle school youth in multi-systematic promotive behaviors at the individual-, interpersonal-, and community-level to make lasting positive
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Evictions and tenant-landlord relationships during the 2020–2021 eviction moratorium in the US Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-01-14 Jack Tsai, Minda Huang, John R. Blosnich, Eric B. Elbogen
This study provisionally examined the effects of the US eviction moratorium instituted in response to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Three waves of data collected May 2020–April 2021 from a nationally representative sample of middle- and low-income US tenants (n = 3393 in Wave 1, n = 1311 in Wave 2, and 814 in Wave 3) were analyzed. Across three waves, 4.3% of tenants reported experiencing
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Cross-age peer mentoring for youth: A meta-analysis Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-29 Samantha Burton, Elizabeth B. Raposa, Cyanea Y. S. Poon, Geert Jan J. M. Stams, Jean Rhodes
Although most mentoring programs for youth are structured around intergenerational relationships, a growing number of programs rely on cross-age peer mentoring. Such programs capitalize on the availability of youth mentors to promote positive outcomes in younger peers. This study used a multilevel meta-analytic approach to estimate the effect size of cross-age peer mentoring programs and evaluate potential
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Community-engaged asset mapping with Latinx immigrant families of youth with disabilities Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-28 Yolanda Suarez-Balcazar, Amy Early, Daniela E. Miranda, Hannah Marquez, Ashley Maldonado, Manuel Garcia-Ramirez
Asset mapping is a participatory methodology that engages community members in identifying services and settings that promote health and well-being. This study aimed to identify community assets from the perspective of Latinx immigrant families with youth with disabilities. Latinx immigrant families (n = 21) participated in the mapping, followed by a reflection session and an open forum (n = 30). The
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Remembering where we're from: Community- and individual-level predictors of college students' White privilege awareness Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-22 Emily J. Blevins, Nathan R. Todd
Scholars in the field of community psychology have called for more research dedicated to examining White privilege as part of a system of White supremacy in the United States. One branch of this work focuses on awareness of White privilege, yet to date, this research has typically investigated awareness of White privilege at individual levels of analysis instead of also focusing on neighborhoods, schools
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“Being a team of five strong women… we had to make an impression:” The College Math Academy as an intervention into mathematics education Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-15 Nandini Bhattacharya, Regina D. Langhout, S. Sylvane Vaccarino-Ruiz, Natalya Jackson, Maya Woolfe, Wendy Matta, Britney Zuniga, Zella Rowe, Leilani Gibo
This paper, a first-person account, describes a community psychology-aligned intervention into a precalculus mathematics class at an Hispanic Serving Research Institution. The intervention was designed because the standard precalculus mathematics class had a high failure rate, especially for Latinx students, which was serving as a barrier for declaration of a Science, Technology, Engineering, or Mathematics
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Kongera Kwiyubaka (rebuilding ourselves again): Culturally responsive and contextually relevant collective healing in post-genocide Rwanda Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-13 Jean Pierre Ndagijimana
Drawing on the local experiences, knowledge, and wisdom of Rwandan youth can make them agents of healing from the genocide against the Tutsi in ways that are culturally appropriate, relevant, and meaningful. This qualitative study aimed to develop an emerging framework for intervening with youth that is centered in the experiences and cultural context of the Rwandan youth post-genocide. Drawing on
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Colonised minds and community psychology in the academy: Collaborative autoethnographic reflections Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-02-07 Eleanor Drake, Grant Jeffrey, Paul Duckett
We reflect on decolonization and in particular the process of decolonizing our own minds. We discuss the need for radical decolonization of psychology and for critique of community psychology's relationship to both psychology and the Academy, noting ways in which community psychology itself becomes appropriated for the colonizing project of the Academy. Using collaborative autoethnography (CAE), a
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Think Big: A multinational collaboration to promote children's role as coresearchers in participatory research Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-01-12 Katitza Marinkovic Chavez, Lisa Gibbs, Mahia Saracostti, Andrea Lafaurie, Rona Campbell, Dominique Sweeney, María Teresa Hernández, María Belén Sotomayor, Florencia Escobar, Rocío López-Ordosgoitia, Diana Alexandra Giraldo Cadavid, Diana Marcela Aristizábal García, Marcus Wright, Dimitrios Charalampopoulos, Edgardo Miranda, Eva Alisic
The field of participatory research with children developed largely thanks to shared learning between different cultures, places, and disciplines. However, grand narratives and power relationships in academia inherited from colonialism and imperialism can threaten to obstruct the transformative value of this approach. In this article, we present the case of Think Big, a multinational collaboration
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Indigenous community psychologies, decolonization, and radical imagination within ecologies of knowledges Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2022-01-11 Nuria Ciofalo, Patricia Dudgeon, Linda W. Nikora
As the American Psychological Association Taskforce on Indigenous Psychology acknowledges, fidelity to the inalienable right to self-determination is the ethical foundation of Indigenous psychology. The task of decolonizing psychology is not only about divesting from Eurocentric paradigms that have controlled and limited Indigenous wellbeing, but producing new paradigms founded on Indigenous knowledges
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Understanding the role of mental health clubhouses in promoting wellness and health equity using Pilinahā—An indigenous framework for health Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-28
[Article in American Journal of Community Psychology. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajcp.12457] Article first published online: 21 September 2020 When this article (Agner et al., 2020) was first published online, there was an error in the author note and the abstract. The sixth author's last name should have been spelled Kaukau (not Kakau), and the Hawaiʻi Clubhouse Coalition was initially
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Acknowledging bereavement, strengthening communities: Introducing an online compassionate community initiative for the recognition of pandemic grief Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-22 Deborah Ummel, Mélanie Vachon, Alexandra Guité-Verret
Despite public health measures and collective efforts, millions of individuals have unfortunately died from COVID-19 complications worldwide, leaving several million family members at risk of developing bereavement complications. In the Canadian province of Quebec, where substantial deaths were associated with COVID-19, we established an online support community for bereaved caregivers who lost a loved
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Just data representation for Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders: A critical review of systemic Indigenous erasure in census and recommendations for psychologists Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-08 Steven M. Sasa, Aggie J. Yellow Horse
The decennial Census survey marks the emergence of federal classifications of race and ethnicity by which the U.S. government has historically conflated Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders (NHPI, hereafter) as “Asian or Pacific Islander.” This conflation amplifies health injustices and inequities of NHPIs through multiple mechanisms because it masks the complex and heterogeneous experiences of NHPIs
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The role of memory practices in building spiritual solidarity for survivors of state violence Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-12-07 Jenny Escobar
This article examines memory as a tool for transnational solidarity that is grounded in spiritual connection with those who have been disappeared or killed by state actors in Colombia. Remembering is one of the ways people come together to push against mechanisms of state violence that render survivors as invisible. By interviewing 15 survivors of state violence in Colombia, this study shows how memory
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Dissident women's letter writing as decolonial plurilogues of relational solidarities for epistemic justice Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-24 Jesica Siham Fernández, Michelle Fine, Monica Eviandaru Madyaningrum, Nuria Ciofalo
Braiding our words, “dissi-dance,” and desires, this article engages how various social actors, and communities—which we are a part of and belong to—challenge structural violence, oppression, inequity, and social, racial, and epistemic injustice. We thread these reflections through our written words, in subversive letters which we offer in the form of a written relational conversation among us: a plurilogue
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A systems framework depicting how complex neighborhood dynamics and contextual factors could impact the effectiveness of an alcohol outlet zoning policy Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-16 Pamela A. Matson, Ivana Stankov, Kristen Hassmiller Lich, Sarah Flessa, Jacob Lowy, Rachel L. J. Thornton
An updated zoning policy eliminating all alcohol outlets (liquor stores) in residential districts was implemented to reduce high rates of violent crime in Baltimore City. Diverse stakeholders were engaged in group model building (GMB) activities to develop causal loop diagrams (CLDs) that elucidate the impact of the new zoning policy on crime, and more broadly, the potentially unintended social and
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Racial regularities: Setting-level dynamics as a source of ethnic-racial socialization Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-12 Diane L. Hughes, Jon Alexander Watford
A substantial literature has focused on how ethnic-racial socialization from parents shapes youths' racial identities and the meanings they attach to their own and others' racial group membership. We argue that a critically important source of information to youth about the meaning and significance of race, and therefore a key source of ethnic-racial socialization, resides in youths' exposure to repeated
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The politics of belonging in Alcoholics Anonymous: A qualitative interview study Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-11 Hannah S. Glassman, Maja Moensted, Paul Rhodes, Niels Buus
A prevalent critique of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is that members must adopt an inflexible illness narrative, taking on an “alcoholic” identity and performing a set of practices to address this condition. Conversely, a small body of research suggests that, rather than comprising the uniform adoption of a rigid narrative, integration into AA is achieved by negotiating individual beliefs, values, and
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Making the road caminando de otra manera: Co-constructing decolonial community psychologies from the Global South Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-07 Nuria Ciofalo
Current discussion on coloniality dismantles structures embedded in neoliberal capitalism that maintain and perpetuate social pathologies. Theories and praxes emerging from Abya Yala (North, Central, and South America) provide academic and nonacademic contributions to co-construct community psychologies de otra manera (otherwise). These accountable ways of knowing and acting in cultural context and
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“You get to understand we are all human beings”: Community solidarity initiatives as spaces of recognition, resistance, and change Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-07 Megan Vine, Ronni M. Greenwood
In Ireland the Direct Provision system segregates and excludes displaced people from the host community, and informal community solidarity initiatives (CSIs) were established nationwide to address this issue. We examined experiences of intergroup contact in CSIs and related contexts to identify how solidarity is produced, and for whom, through photovoice workshops (Study 1: n = 13) with displaced participants
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From rhetorical “inclusion” toward decolonial futures: Building communities of resistance against structural violence Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-07 Urmitapa Dutta, Abdul Kalam Azad, Manjuwara Mullah, Kazi Sharowar Hussain, Wahida Parveez
In this paper, we name and uplift the ways in which Miya community workers are building communities of resistance as ways to address the manifold colonial, structural (including state-sponsored), and epistemic violence in their lives. These active spaces of refusal and resistance constitute the grounds of our theorizing. Centering this theory in the flesh, we offer critical implications for decolonial
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Perceived monoracism and psychological adjustment of multiracial adults: The roles of racially diverse contexts and creating third space Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Abigail K. Gabriel, Hyung Chol Yoo, Kelly F. Jackson, Rudy P. Guevarra
Across two studies, we examined whether racially diverse contexts in combination with creating a third (multiracial) space played a protective role in the association between perceived monoracism and psychological adjustment for multiracial adults. Study 1 participants (N = 263; 77.8% female, Mage = 32.16 years) were recruited from national multiracial organizations and completed an online cross-sectional
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Green schoolyard renovations in low-income urban neighborhoods: Benefits to students, schools, and the surrounding community Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-10-29 Amy M. Bohnert, Laura M. Nicholson, Laurel Mertz, Carolyn R. Bates, Dana E. Gerstein
Green schoolyards may buffer against the effects of urbanization through increasing access to nature and its benefits. The present study was a community-academic partnership that examined the effects of green schoolyard renovations on utilization, physical activity (PA), and social interactions as well as perceptions of safety, neighborhood climate, and social cohesion among those living in low-income
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Understanding afterschool engagement: Investigating developmental outcomes for adolescents Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-10-27 Ashlee L. Sjogren, Sharon Zumbrunn, Michael Broda, Christine L. Bae, Nancy L. Deutsch
Though student engagement is hypothesized to be a factor in explaining student level differences in afterschool programs, the measurement of student engagement in this context is inconsistent, and findings from the small number of studies about how engagement impacts developmental and academic outcomes are mixed. In this study, we tested the factor structure of Wang and colleagues' school engagement
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Perceiving fairness in an unfair world: System justification and the mental health of girls in detention facilities Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-10-25 Corianna E. Sichel, Shabnam Javdani, Jacqueline Yi
Psychologists in the helping professions have long accepted the idea that cognitions have implications for mental health and wellbeing. Community psychologists have further established the importance of context and systems in the etiology of mental health problems. In this paper, we argue that as a discipline that prioritizes social justice, community psychology should consider associations between
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Disability organizations as empowering settings: Challenging stigmatization, promoting emancipation Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-10-11 Monica E. Madyaningrum, Christopher C. Sonn, Adrian T. Fisher
This study investigated how a local disability organization in Yogyakarta Province, Indonesia, has functioned as an empowering setting for its members. This article discusses, in particular, the context specific features that have enabled members of this organization to resist the pervasive stigmatization commonly imposed upon people with disabilities. The research data was collected through interviews
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Neighborhood-level predictors of African American and Latinx parents' ethnic–racial socialization Am. J. Community Psychol. (IF 4.019) Pub Date : 2021-09-30 Dawn P. Witherspoon, Ciara Smalls Glover, Wei Wei, Diane L. Hughes
Few studies examine how neighborhood structural factors (e.g., socioeconomic status [SES] and diversity) and perceived disorder may influence the messages parents communicate to their youth about race/ethnicity. Guided by the integrative model and social disorganization theory, this study examines how parents' ethnic–racial socialization messages (ERS) are shaped by the broader environment. Data come