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Toward a social psychology of high risk youth exclusion by Anju Anand A thesis submitted in p PDF

496 Pages·2017·3.09 MB·English
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“Never actually had a chance”: Toward a social psychology of high risk youth exclusion by Anju Anand A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES IN EDUCATION Department of Educational Psychology University of Alberta © Anju Anand, 2017 ii Abstract Former foster youth often experience an array of serious challenges during their young adult years. Problems such as homelessness, school drop-out, and mental health and drug problems have been attributed to the requirement that foster youth lose their supports from child welfare as they approach the legal threshold of adulthood in many North American jurisdictions (i.e., they “age-out” of their eligibility for services as children). In this dissertation, I explore how this process of aging-out specifically leads to such poor outcomes for former foster youth. I also explore how the process of being excluded from supports and resources, that are often seen as necessary for healthy child development at earlier periods in the youths’ lives, affect the development of their capacities to survive on their own. A social exclusion framework was utilized to explore how multiple forms of social and economic disadvantage, throughout the youth participants’ lives, (e.g., poor youth labour markets, expensive rental accommodations, absence of consistent caregivers and inadequate educational and mental health supports) interacted to prevent former foster youth from being able to develop the life and work skills needed for independent living. The results suggest that not only did such exclusionary events and processes compromise skill development, but they also interfered with the development of feelings of psychological efficacy and agency that would likely have enabled the young people to stay committed to vocational and moral identity roles that they felt represented their “true” selves, such as being a law-abiding student or employee. It would seem that commitment to such identities could have permitted the youth to feel as though they belonged in mainstream society, as opposed to belonging in marginalized subcultures, characterized by illicit drug use and other high risk activities. Case studies of four youth were comprised of extensive biographical information that I obtained through conversational interviews as well as a structured interview (Adult Attachment Interview) and questionnaire (Trauma and Attachment Belief Scale) that yielded in-depth information on adverse childhood events such as abuse. iii Preface This thesis is an original work by Anju Anand. The research project, of which this thesis is a part, received research ethics approval from the University of Alberta Research Ethics Board, Project Name “Exploring the Social Exclusion of High Risk Youth”, No. 00009069, September 20, 2009. iv Acknowledgements I would like to especially thank my family, Derek and Suu Kyi, for their unconditional love and acceptance of me, every day and through every challenge. I would also like to acknowledge my examining committee, particularly Dr. George Buck and Dr. Gretchen Hess. Thank you for your unwavering support and for always demonstrating an open mind and sensitivity to the vulnerable population that is the subject of this dissertation. Dr. Veronica Smith and Dr. David Pederson also expressed a keen interest in the welfare of my young participants and provided invaluable feedback to me. Finally, I am grateful to Dr. Jacqueline Pei and Dr. Christina Rinaldi for empowering me to passionately defend my views on how to best meet the complex challenges of supporting high risk youth. v Table of Contents Chapter One 1 Study Background and Rationale 1 Toward a Social Psychology of Exclusion 7 The Psychology of Exclusion 12 Attachment and Trauma 12 Attachment 12 Trauma 16 Focal Theory and Emerging Adulthood 18 Autonomy and Identity 21 Autonomy 21 Identity 22 Methodology 27 Deductive Qualitative Analysis 27 Case Studies and Sample 32 Data Collection 36 Collection of interviews and questionnaire responses 36 Preface to the Results Discussion 44 Biographies 45 Jay 45 Tamara 47 Maria 49 Carmen 50 vi Chapter Two 52 Fast-Tracking to the Mainstream: The Impact of Accelerated and Compressed Transitions 52 Tamara 52 Maria 53 Jay 55 Carmen 57 Identity 59 Efficacy 65 Vocational and academic efficacy 67 Social skills efficacy 105 Sobriety efficacy 121 Chapter Three 149 Moral Identity 149 Storying Moral Selves 150 The role of childhood and family resources 155 The role of cultural/economic communities 167 Community membership moderates degree of risk-taking 176 Adolescent-limited and life-course persistent risk-taking 184 Narrating transformation: Recovery, redemption and coping 186 Grappling/failing to grapple with harmful transgressions 192 Making sense of bad behaviour and returning to God 194 Downplaying the harm done and staying in control 198 vii Rationalizing violence 202 Nothing left to lose: Failing to care about self or others 205 Getting lost in emotional pain and risky coping strategies 207 Resorting to risks, in desperation, to communicate and cope with pain 213 The role of identity diffusion in problems with moral agency 217 Negative identity as a form of identity diffusion 221 Playing at badness versus being bad ‘for real’ 226 Supply and demand influences 232 The role of rewards for ‘good’ behaviour 241 Loneliness and the unpredictability of social rewards 242 Lacking practise with resisting fun/being bored with being good 244 Trauma affects temporal perceptions/beliefs 245 Cultural relativism influences 246 Caring for family and friends adds to the confusion 249 Parental guidance (or lack thereof) brings further confusion 252 Success at hustling reinforces ‘bad’ identity 255 Resisting the ordinary 257 Out of practise with being good 260 Moral “self-battles”: Conscience versus negative identity 260 Moral “self-battles”: Conscience versus perceived survival needs 261 Old ‘good’ self versus newer ‘bad’ self 262 Morality as a life skill 263 Covert resistance 265 viii Brain changes interfere with good intentions 267 Being an outsider 268 Street family exclusion 269 Childhood social problems 274 Exclusion from intimate female friendships 277 Family exclusion 279 Lack of belongingness (amongst other factors) predicts suicide risk 284 The adaptive value of being an outsider 287 Chapter Four 291 Antecedents of Identity Problems: A Deeper Look Into the Past 291 Precursor Stages to Identity: Erikson’s Industry, Initiative and Autonomy 291 The impact of chaos 297 The role of children’s coping efforts 305 There are no children here 308 The additional burden of ennui 308 Social exclusions undermine the social contract (and disinhibit impulsivity) 310 Social exclusions undermine psychological resilience 311 The identity burden of accelerated development 311 The additional burden of trauma 313 Social alienation and self-alienation 314 Trauma and Attachment Beliefs Scale (TABS) 315 Trauma from Street Assaults and Childhood Attachment Disruptions 317 Street assaults (intimate partner violence or prostitution related violence) 317 ix Attachment related trauma 321 Adult Attachment Interview 324 The Relational Dynamic Underlying Preoccupied Attachment 329 Unmet needs resulting from inconsistent caregiving 329 The Imact of Trust Violations: Moral Injury 335 Betrayal of the attachment bond: Impacts on identity development 342 Betrayal bonds and the acceptance of physical and sexual abuse 343 Trauma bonds, conditional parent regard, and negative identity 344 Possible Unconscious Influences on Identity Development 349 Excluding painful memories underlies identity diffusion 350 Excluding painful memories interferes with self-continuity 352 Excluding painful memories interferes with self-agency 353 Unconscious love deprivation underlies emotional dependency/social problems 354 Deficits in reflective functioning interfere with self-agency 355 Attachment and Trauma Influences on Youth-Worker Interactions 358 Some Final Observations about Housing Supports 382 Postscript 388 Jay 388 Tamara 389 Carmen 390 Maria 393 Chapter Five 396 Conclusion and Implications 396 x The Case for Counselling about Structural Interventions 404 The Case for Structural Interventions 417 The Interdependence and Equal Importance of Agency and Structure: Implications for Free Will 419 Changing the Environment 427 The case for prevention and early intervention 434 The problem with race based child welfare policy 434 The problem with prioritizing Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) 441 The problem with identifying youth as “high risk” 448 The case for reforming transitional supports towards adult independence 453 To My Daughter the Junkie on a Train 460 References 461 Appendix A 484 Trauma and Attachment Belief Subscales 484 Appendix B 485

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that foster youth lose their supports from child welfare as they approach the legal threshold of adulthood in many .. workers have lauded this process view of social exclusion, for its recognition of the operation of both structure and The implication of such study results is that social workers n
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