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Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Empowerment in Youth Development: A Study of Sociopolitical Control as Mediator of Ecological Systems' Influence on Developmental Outcomes

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TLDR
Sociopolitical control was found to mediate the relationships between ecological supports and risk factors and developmental outcomes, leading to the conclusion that perceived efficacy in the sociopolitical domain, and youth empowerment, more generally, should be considered as core elements of the ecology of human development.
Abstract
Empowerment has become an influential concept and theoretical framework for social policy and practice. Still, relatively little is known about the roles that empowerment plays in the ecology of human development, particularly among young people. This article reports results of a study of psychological empowerment among young people, using data from 629 high school students (65.8% female; 96.5% non-white). Using a path analysis, we examined the role of perceived sociopolitical control--an indicator of the intrapersonal component of psychological empowerment--as a mediator between ecological support systems and developmental outcomes. Findings confirmed that social support in family, peer, and school settings, and family cohesion positively predict self-esteem and perceived school importance, which, in turn, have protective effects on psychological symptoms, violent behaviors and substance use. Sociopolitical control was found to mediate the relationships between ecological supports and risk factors and developmental outcomes, leading to the conclusion that perceived efficacy in the sociopolitical domain, and youth empowerment, more generally, should be considered as core elements of the ecology of human development. Policy and practice aimed at promoting positive developmental outcomes and preventing risk behaviors should take their relationship to sociopolitical control into account.

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The psychology and practice of youth-adult partnership: bridging generations for youth development and community change.

TL;DR: Y-AP is proposed as a unifying concept, distinct from other forms of youth-adult relationships, with four core elements: authentic decision making, natural mentors, reciprocity, and community connectedness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teaching Citizens: The Role of Open Classroom Climate in Fostering Critical Consciousness Among Youth

TL;DR: Examination of the extent to which an open climate for discussion—one in which controversial issues are openly discussed with respect for all opinions—relates to youth’s critical consciousness found that an open classroom climate predicted some, but not all, components of critical consciousness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Targeting empowerment in community development: a community psychology approach to enhancing local power and well-being

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed psychological empowerment as an orientation and targeted outcome for community development efforts, and made the case for more widespread use of empowerment theory, at multiple levels of analysis, in community development processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of Adolescent and Young Adult Civic Engagement on Health and Socioeconomic Status in Adulthood.

TL;DR: Volunteering and voting are favorably associated with subsequent mental health and health behaviors, and activism is associated with more health-risk behaviors and not associated with mental health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conceptualizing and measuring youth-adult partnership in community programs: a cross national study.

TL;DR: A brief measure of Y–AP that is explicitly grounded in current theory, research, and community practice is developed and concluded that the measure has the potential to support community efforts to maximize the quality of youth programs.
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