Title of article
Adaptive Coping Reduces the Impact of Community Violence Exposure on Violent Behavior among African American and Latino Male Adolescents
Author/Authors
Sonya S. Brady، نويسنده , , Deborah Gorman-Smith & David B. Henry، نويسنده , , Patrick H. Tolan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
11
From page
105
To page
115
Abstract
This study examined whether coping moderated
the impact of community violence exposure (CVE) on
violent behavior among 285 urban African American and
Latino adolescent males assessed annually across 5 years.
Composites indicating overall CVE (having knowledge of
others’ victimization, witnessing violence, direct victimization)
and approach to coping with CVE were created by
averaging across years 1–3 (Time 1; mean ages 14–16).
Adolescents classified as coping effectively tended to
respond to CVE in beneficial ways (e.g., developing longterm
solutions, engaging in positive reappraisal). Violent
behavior was examined across years 1–3 (Time 1) and
years 4–5 (Time 2; mean ages 18–19). CVE was longitudinally
associated with greater violent behavior, adjusting
for Time 1 levels of violent behavior. This association was
significant only among adolescents with less effective
coping strategies. Interventions targeting the enhancement
of coping skills may be an effective method of reducing the
impact of CVE on adolescent violent behavior.
Keywords
Community violence . Coping . Adolescent .African American . Latino
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
828913
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