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Journal Article

Citation

Dedios Sanguineti MC, Jovchelovitch S. Psychol. Violence 2021; 11(2): 123-132.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1037/vio0000376

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We investigate cultural group-level understandings of violence and their connections to individual moral reasoning about violence among disadvantaged young people belonging to gangs (n = 33) and peacebuilding (n = 30) groups.

METHODS: Drawing from in-depth interviews in two low-income neighborhoods in Colombia, we use thematic analysis to explore and compare group-level understandings of violence--entailing definitions of violence, causal attributions of violence, and strategies to handle violence in everyday life--by type of youth group. Next, we use a chi-square analysis to assess between-group differences in the proportion of participants endorsing the morality of violence according to eight potential moral violence triggers.

RESULTS: Youths from both types of groups define violence in similar terms with one key difference. Only gang members ascribe agency to "the group" (i.e., the gang and the family) describing it as a social entity capable of harming and being harmed. This taken-for-granted cultural assumption frames the gang members' justifications of violence as moral to defend one's group. Concurrently, a higher proportion of youths from violent groups support the morality of violence to defend one's reputation (p =.001), honor (p <.001), and group (p =.001).

CONCLUSIONS: Between-group differences in shared understandings of violence are consistent with differences in individual moral reasoning about violence across group type. The findings have implications for improving the efficacy of violence prevention interventions, which rarely account for the link between young people's shared understandings of violence and moral reasoning about its use. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)


Language: en

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