4.3 Article

Emerging Adults' Social Justice Engagement: Motivations, Barriers, and Social Identity

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY
卷 68, 期 1-2, 页码 73-87

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajcp.12495

关键词

Emerging adulthood; Social justice; Identity; Social action

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The study found that emerging adults' motivations for social justice engagement include political climate, self-efficacy, social support, proximity to social issues, knowledge of resources, and limited personal resources. Their social identities also shape how they engage with specific social issues, with multiple privileged and marginalized identities playing a significant role.
This study examines emerging adults' perceived motivations and barriers to social justice engagement, and how their social identities shape involvement. We conducted in-depth interviews with service-learning students (n = 30). Thematic analysis of interview data revealed that participants perceived several motivations and barriers to engagement, including the following: (a) the current political climate, (b) self-efficacy to make small-scale changes, (c) social support in action, (d) proximity to the social issue, (e) knowledge of resources, and (f) limited personal resources. Participants also described how their identities shaped engagement such that participants reflected upon their multiple privileged and marginalized identities and how their identities influenced their approach to engaging with a particular social issue. Findings have implications for recruiting and sustaining emerging adults' involvement in activities aimed at changing social issues.

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