Journal
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 69, Issue 3-4, Pages 451-462Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajcp.12558
Keywords
criminal; juvenile justice; liberation and oppression; mental health; social justice; sociopolitical development; system justification
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Psychologists have long believed that cognitions play a role in mental health, with community psychologists emphasizing the importance of context and systems in mental health issues. This research explores the associations between beliefs about structural inequality and individual mental health, particularly in marginalized populations, highlighting gender differences. Results showed that perceptions of societal fairness were related to lower levels of mental health problems in girls, emphasizing the need for further research and interventions in this area.
Psychologists in the helping professions have long accepted the idea that cognitions have implications for mental health and wellbeing. Community psychologists have further established the importance of context and systems in the etiology of mental health problems. In this paper, we argue that as a discipline that prioritizes social justice, community psychology should consider associations between cognitions about structural and systemic inequality and individual mental health, particularly in marginalized populations. As one illustration of this argument and its complexities, we asked if and to what degree mental health was concurrently associated with adolescents' beliefs in societal fairness (i.e., system-justifying beliefs), attending to gender differences. Our findings were informed by a sample of 196 adolescents residing in detention facilities (49.50% girls; 51.75% Black/Caribbean, 21.68% multiracial; 15.38% Hispanic/Latine; 27.98% LGBTQ+). These youth represent an understudied group in the research literature addressing fairness beliefs and their influence on wellness. Results suggested that boys were more likely to endorse societal fairness compared to girls, but these beliefs were unrelated to their mental health. However, we found a significant gender moderation such that girls who perceived society to be fair reported lower levels of internalizing and externalizing mental health problems. We discuss implications for theory, research, and intervention.
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