Minorities and Deviance: Coping Strategies of the Power-Poor
By (Author) Pamela Black
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
15th November 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Psychology
Society and culture: general
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
302.542019
Hardback
202
Width 160mm, Height 229mm, Spine 21mm
472g
Grounded in both current and original research, Minorities and Deviance, expands the definition of stress and its relationship to deviance, providing a better understanding the role stress can play in addiction, obsession, and self-harm. Focusing on ten types of relatively minor deviant behaviors, Pamela Black explores the stress engendered by minority group membership and the associated feelings of powerlessness and how this can serve as a significant source of stress in and of itself, but when combined with other stressors magnifies the possibility of deviance. Using theoretical constructs derived from Robert Agnews 1992 General Strain Theory, Black tests the effects of not only minority group membership and powerlessness as stressors, but also examines group differences in the effect of more traditional forms of stress: finances, health, and relationships.
Minorities and Deviance encourages readers to understand the dynamic ways people cope with forms of strain, illustrating that deviance is not a universal or monolithic experience. Importantly, it highlights the role of strain as an emotional experience. -- David C. Lane, University of South Dakota
Pamela Black is associate professor of criminal justice at Penn State Hazleton.