Ethn
Dis 1996 Winter-Spring;6(1-2):167-75
Racism and the mental health of African Americans: the role of self and
system blame.
Neighbors HW, Jackson JS, Broman C, Thompson E.
College of Human Medicine, Michigan State University, Ann Arbor 48106-1248,
USA.
The research on external (social system) and internal (personal) attributions
to mental health outcomes for African Americans is reviewed. Although
many blacks have aspirations that they are unable to achieve, the motivational
and mental health consequences of this situation are unclear. Several
researchers have suggested that it is adaptive for African Americans to
reduce striving effort and bring personal goals more in line with the
objective realities of an unfair opportunity structure. Others have proposed
that because an unjust system is to blame, the most appropriate response
is to work collectively with other group members to make the system more
open to opportunities for advancement. Epidemiologic research on the relationship
of internal-external locus of control to mental disorder has generally
found that being internal has positive mental health effects; while having
an external orientation is detrimental. This paper addresses these issues
by demonstrating that the psychiatric-epidemiologic and the race-consciousness
literatures lead to opposite predictions about the relationship of external
attributions (fatalism and system blame) to mental health. The article
concludes with a series of issues that need to be addressed in order to
advance knowledge about social and psychological risk factors for psychiatric
disorders in African Americans.
Publication Types: Review; Review Literature
PMID: 8882845 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]