Minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping

In two studies, this thesis depicts the relationship between minority group status in the United States, perceived discrimination, and coping with stress. Past literature on coping and its types – problem-focused versus emotion-focused – is inconsistent in terms of differences between minority statu...

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Main Author: Vassilliere, Christa (Christa Theresa)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26488
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-264882015-09-20T17:27:14ZMinority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused copingVassilliere, Christa (Christa Theresa)DiscriminationCopingEmotion-focused copingRacismHeterosexismSexual orientationRaceIn two studies, this thesis depicts the relationship between minority group status in the United States, perceived discrimination, and coping with stress. Past literature on coping and its types – problem-focused versus emotion-focused – is inconsistent in terms of differences between minority status groups and majority groups. It remains unknown whether or why Black Americans and lesbian or gay Americans may demonstrate coping patterns that differ from White Americans and heterosexual Americans, respectively. What is altogether absent from the literature is the possible mediating factor of perceived discrimination experienced by these minority groups. That is, differences in internal, stable coping processes that manage stress may have been molded by one’s experience with discrimination. Study 1 examines the relationship between race (Black versus White) and coping, mediated by perceived discrimination. Study 2 examines the relationship between sexual orientation (lesbian or gay versus heterosexual) and coping, mediated by perceived discrimination. Both studies confirm the thesis that minority group members exhibit maladaptive, emotion-focused coping more than majority group members – but that this difference is explained by the minority group members’ perceived discrimination. Historical and political relevance, social implications, and possible limitations in design and interpretation are discussed.text2014-10-10T21:06:54Z2014-052014-10-10May 20142014-10-10T21:06:54ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/26488en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Discrimination
Coping
Emotion-focused coping
Racism
Heterosexism
Sexual orientation
Race
spellingShingle Discrimination
Coping
Emotion-focused coping
Racism
Heterosexism
Sexual orientation
Race
Vassilliere, Christa (Christa Theresa)
Minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping
description In two studies, this thesis depicts the relationship between minority group status in the United States, perceived discrimination, and coping with stress. Past literature on coping and its types – problem-focused versus emotion-focused – is inconsistent in terms of differences between minority status groups and majority groups. It remains unknown whether or why Black Americans and lesbian or gay Americans may demonstrate coping patterns that differ from White Americans and heterosexual Americans, respectively. What is altogether absent from the literature is the possible mediating factor of perceived discrimination experienced by these minority groups. That is, differences in internal, stable coping processes that manage stress may have been molded by one’s experience with discrimination. Study 1 examines the relationship between race (Black versus White) and coping, mediated by perceived discrimination. Study 2 examines the relationship between sexual orientation (lesbian or gay versus heterosexual) and coping, mediated by perceived discrimination. Both studies confirm the thesis that minority group members exhibit maladaptive, emotion-focused coping more than majority group members – but that this difference is explained by the minority group members’ perceived discrimination. Historical and political relevance, social implications, and possible limitations in design and interpretation are discussed. === text
author Vassilliere, Christa (Christa Theresa)
author_facet Vassilliere, Christa (Christa Theresa)
author_sort Vassilliere, Christa (Christa Theresa)
title Minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping
title_short Minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping
title_full Minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping
title_fullStr Minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping
title_full_unstemmed Minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping
title_sort minority group status, perceived discrimination, and emotion-focused coping
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26488
work_keys_str_mv AT vassillierechristachristatheresa minoritygroupstatusperceiveddiscriminationandemotionfocusedcoping
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