An Intersectional-Contextual Approach to Racial Trauma Exposure Risk and Coping Among Black Youth

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Abstract

Black youth experience racial discrimination at higher rates than other racial/ethnic groups in the United States. To identify how racism can simultaneously serve as a risk factor for adverse childhood experience (ACE) exposure, a discrete type of ACE, and a post-ACE mental health risk factor among Black youth, Bernard and colleagues (2021) proposed the culturally informed ACEs (C-ACE) model. While an important addition to the literature, the C-ACE model is framed around a single axis of race-based oppression. This paper extends the model by incorporating an intersectional and ecodevelopmental lens that elucidates how gendered racism framed by historical trauma, as well as gender-based socialization experiences, may have implications for negative mental health outcomes among Black youth. Clinical and research implications are discussed.

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Galán, C. A., Auguste, E. E., Smith, N. A., & Meza, J. I. (2022). An Intersectional-Contextual Approach to Racial Trauma Exposure Risk and Coping Among Black Youth. Journal of Research on Adolescence, 32(2), 583–595. https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12757

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