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Can White Guilt Motivate Action? The Role of Civic Beliefs. | LitMetric

Can White Guilt Motivate Action? The Role of Civic Beliefs.

J Youth Adolesc

Norton School of Family and Consumer Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.

Published: June 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Limited research has explored how factors influence White youth's civic actions for social change, particularly focusing on the connection between Whiteness and civic engagement.
  • The study examines the impact of White guilt on civic actions in two groups of White young adults, revealing that White guilt can motivate civic action, especially when combined with a sense of social responsibility.
  • Results indicate that enhancing civic beliefs may strengthen the relationship between White guilt and civic engagement, suggesting a pathway to encourage meaningful actions against inequality.

Article Abstract

Limited research has investigated factors that shape White youth's civic action aimed at social change. Investigating the relation between Whiteness and civic action is an essential step toward identifying and cultivating environments that encourage White youth to use their racial privilege to combat inequality through civic engagement. To address this gap in the literature, across two distinct samples, this study investigates the role of White guilt in motivating civic action and the moderating role of civic beliefs. Participants included all young adults who self-identified as White from two online survey studies (Study 1, N = 219 college students, 71.9% Women, 28.1% Men, mean age = 19.6; Study 2, N = 185, 50% current college students, 54.6% Women, 45.4% Men, mean age = 23.9). In Study 1, White guilt related to more civic action. In the context of high social responsibility, White guilt related to more civic action; in the context of low social responsibility, White guilt corresponded with less civic action. In Study 2, White guilt also related to more civic action, and civic efficacy emerged as a potential moderator. Collectively, these results highlight the potential for White guilt to be turned into meaningful civic action, particularly when coupled with civic beliefs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10964-021-01401-7DOI Listing

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