Leaving home for African Americans in the emerging adulthood era: A phenomenological study

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Abstract

There has been limited research regarding how minority culture youth experience leaving home. Eight African American individuals who had “launched” from their families-of-origin were interviewed. By using Moustakas’ Transcendental Phenomenological method, several themes emerged to describe the lived experience of leaving home. The themes included need for independence, a comparison of privilege for others and oppression for self, obligation to family, and pride in self-sufficiency. According to the findings in this study, leaving home for young African Americans is a culturally distinct experience which aligns more closely with traditional patterns of leaving home. Although the emerging adulthood era functions as a context in which the participants exist, the young African American participants in this study identified delayed launching as a “failure.”.

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Wilson, N. N., Sailor, J. L., Calix, S. I., & Carney, W. (2017). Leaving home for African Americans in the emerging adulthood era: A phenomenological study. Qualitative Report, 22(2), 527–541. https://doi.org/10.46743/2160-3715/2017.2517

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