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The imperative to support Black youths in resisting low and limiting expectations
Authors:Régine Debrosse  Leslie Touré Kapo  Karen Métayer
Affiliation:1. School of Social Work, McGill University, Montréal, Quebec, Canada;2. Élisabeth-Bruyère School of Social Innovation, Université St-Paul, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Harmful narratives circulate about Black youths in North America. Deficit narratives portray them, their culture, and their communities as problems, narratives about policing encourage their control and punishment, color-evasive narratives ignore how race shapes their experiences, and essentialist narratives erase their distinct and often intersectional experiences by presenting them as monolithic. Community psychology and allied fields do not escape these trends, which in turn infuse practice, research, and teaching involving Black youths. The present paper highlights four principles that community psychology and allied fields can adopt to support Black youths in resisting these negative and narrow narratives. They are: (1) emphasizing Black youths' and Black communities' strengths, (2) supporting their agency, (3) adopting culturally relevant practices, and (4) developing critical consciousness through reflections on and deconstruction of these narratives. We hope that the reflections shared in this paper will expand the perspectives infused by researchers and practitioners in community psychology, social work, urban studies, and allied fields who work with Black youths.
Keywords:blackness  master narratives  race/ethnicity  stereotypes  youth programs
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