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'911' among West African immigrants in New York City: A qualitative study of parents' disciplinary practices and their perceptions of child welfare authorities

机译:纽约市西非移民中的“ 911”:定性研究父母的纪律做法及其对儿童福利机构的看法

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Immigrant parents' perceptions of child protective services may have important implications for their engagement in public institutions that are central to their children's well being. The current study examined West African immigrants' perceptions of child welfare authorities and the role of disciplining and monitoring in these communities' meaning making. A multiethnic group of 59 West African immigrants (32 parents and 27 adolescent children) living in the United States were interviewed in 18 focus groups and eight individual interviews between December 2009 and July 2010. Data were analyzed using a grounded theory approach; strategies for rigor included triangulation (multiple interview formats, varied composition of groups, multiple coders for each transcript), verification (follow-up interviewing, feedback to community-based organizations), and auditability. Primary among parents' concerns were " 911" (used to refer to the police and child protective authorities), the loss of collective child monitoring networks, and threats to their children posed by " American" values and neighborhood violence. Children were concerned with parents' close monitoring that resulted in boredom and a sense that parents did not recognize them for adhering to their families' values. Feedback from CBOs suggested that parents got their information about child protective policies from children but that although misinformed they were accurate in their negative assessment of contact. Not unlike in other urban populations, West African immigrants' disciplinary tactics are instrumental, oriented toward protecting their children from the multiple dangers perceived in their surroundings, but may also put them at risk for contact with child protective services. Results suggest that " 911" results from a " loss spiral" (Hobfoll, 1989) that begins as West Africans resettle without collective child monitoring networks, leading to increased concern for their children's safety, and interacting with a school-home disciplinary mismatch that may increase the likelihood of contact with child protection.
机译:移民父母对儿童保护服务的看法可能对他们参与对孩子的健康至关重要的公共机构产生重要影响。本研究调查了西非移民对儿童福利机构的看法以及纪律和监督在这些社区的意义创造中的作用。在2009年12月至2010年7月之间,我们对18个焦点小组和8个人进行了采访,调查了一个居住在美国的59名西非移民(32名父母和27名青少年儿童)的多民族群体。严格的策略包括三角剖分(多种访谈格式,不同的组组成,每个成绩单的多个编码员),验证(后续访谈,对社区组织的反馈)和可审核性。父母关注的主要问题是“ 911”(用于指代警察和儿童保护当局),失去集体的儿童监督网络以及“美国”价值观和邻里暴力对孩子的威胁。孩子们担心父母的密切监视会导致无聊,并感到父母不承认他们坚持家庭价值观。来自CBO的反馈表明,父母从孩子那里获得了有关儿童保护政策的信息,但是尽管错误地告知了他们,他们对接触的负面评估是准确的。与其他城市人口不同,西非移民的纪律策略是有帮助的,旨在保护他们的孩子免受周围环境的多重危险的影响,但也可能使他们有接触儿童保护服务的风险。结果表明,“ 911”是“损失螺旋”的结果(Hobfoll,1989),该损失始于西非人在没有集体儿童监护网络的情况下重新定居,从而导致对儿童安全的担忧增加,并与学校家庭纪律失调互动,可能导致增加接触儿童保护的可能性。

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