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'Me da cuenta': Sources of resiliency identified by Mexican-American young men in Kings Beach, CA

Posted on:2010-03-04Degree:M.S.WType:Thesis
University:University of Nevada, RenoCandidate:Dobbins, BetsyFull Text:PDF
GTID:2446390002471319Subject:Anthropology
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Latino youth are often categorized as an at-risk population, particularly in regards to the juvenile justice system. Overrepresented within the juvenile justice system and misunderstood as a group collectively, Mexican-American male adolescents are a group without a voice in much of the literature describing how minority youth identify, access, and navigate internal and community-based sources of resiliency. Using a constructionist framework of resiliency, this exploratory, qualitative study examines how Mexican male adolescents who have had access with the juvenile justice system describe their experiences as "at-risk" and how they negotiate competing identities generated by a discourse of "illegality" and processes of marginalization. Despite structural constraints generating a very real sense of risk, the participants indicated relatedness/connectedness, when grounded in Mexican cultural values of family, respect, and collectivism, as a pathway to resiliency.
Keywords/Search Tags:Resiliency, Juvenile justice system
PDF Full Text Request
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