Heterogeneity of Sexual Risk Profiles Among Juvenile Justice-Involved African American Girls

Author(s):  
Patricia Logan-Greene ◽  
Erin W. Bascug ◽  
Ralph J. DiClemente ◽  
Dexter R. Voisin
Author(s):  
Tera Eva Agyepong

This chapter examines the state’s flagship institution for delinquent girls. It reveals the way intersecting notions of race, gender, and sexuality shaped reformers’ and practitioners’ implementation of juvenile justice. African American girls at the Illinois Training School were blamed for the interracial sexual relationships staff members and professionals abhorred and were considered the most violent girls in the institution. They also became subject to a race specific and gendered construction of female delinquency in the institution. Unlike the image of a fixable, inherently innocent delinquent that spurred the child-saving movement, black girls were cast as inherently deviant, unfixable, and dangerous delinquent whose negative influences could contaminate other children in the institution.


2011 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geri R. Donenberg ◽  
Erin Emerson ◽  
Mary Ellen Mackesy-Amiti

Sexual Health ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerris L. Raiford ◽  
Puja Seth ◽  
Amy M. Fasula ◽  
Ralph J. DiClemente

Background: HIV and other sexually transmissible infections (HIV/STIs) are significant contributors to adolescent girls’ morbidity in the US. Risks for HIV/STIs are increased among adolescent girls involved in the juvenile justice system, and African American adolescent girls comprise nearly 50% of adolescent girls in detention centres. Although HIV prevention programs focus on HIV/STI knowledge, increased knowledge may not be sufficient to reduce sexual risk. The present study examined the interactive effects of HIV/STI knowledge and the importance of being in a relationship (a relationship imperative) on sexual risk behaviours in a sample of detained African American adolescent girls. Methods: In all, 188 African American adolescent girls, 13–17 years of age, were recruited from a short-term detention facility in Atlanta, Georgia, and completed assessments on sexual risk behaviours, relationship characteristics, HIV/STI knowledge and several psychosocial risk factors. Results: When girls endorsed a relationship imperative, higher HIV/STI knowledge was associated with low partner communication self-efficacy, inconsistent condom use and unprotected sex, when controlling for demographics and self-esteem. Conclusions: Young girls with high HIV/STI knowledge may have placed themselves at risk for HIV/STIs given the importance and value they place on being in a relationship. Contextual factors should be considered when developing interventions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 194-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen W. Wilson ◽  
Briana A. Woods ◽  
Erin Emerson ◽  
Geri R. Donenberg

2019 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 492-499 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynda M. Sagrestano ◽  
Alayne J. Ormerod ◽  
Cirleen DeBlaere

Peer sexual harassment (PSH) occurs frequently and across contexts during adolescence. The current study examined the relations among PSH in school, psychological distress, sexual experimentation, and sexual risk-taking in a sample of African American middle and high school girls. Results indicate that negative body appraisals mediated the relationship between PSH and psychological distress, suggesting that PSH is one way to operationalize interpersonal sexualization and sexual objectification. PSH was directly associated with sexual experimentation, but the association between PSH and sexual experimentation was not mediated by negative body appraisals. Neither PSH nor negative body appraisals were related to sexual risk-taking. This suggests that frequent exposure to high levels of sexualization and sexual objectification, in the form of PSH, is associated with more psychological distress and sexual experimentation, but not with sexual risk-taking, regardless of how girls feel about their bodies.


2018 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-38
Author(s):  
Geri Donenberg ◽  
Erin Emerson ◽  
Mary Ellen Mackesy-Amiti ◽  
Faith Fletcher

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