Intergroup relations affect depressive symptoms of Indigenous people: Longitudinal evidence

Author:

Zagefka Hanna1ORCID,González Roberto2ORCID,Mackenna Bernardo3,Castro Diego4,Carozzi Pia2,Pairican Fernando5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Royal Holloway University of London Surrey UK

2. Escuela de Psicología Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Santiago Chile

3. Sociology Department University of California San Diego California USA

4. Social Research Institute University College London London UK

5. Escuela de Antropología Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Santiago Chile

Abstract

AbstractOne thousand eight hundred thirty‐five individuals who self‐identified as Indigenous (with Mapuche being the largest group) participated in a two‐wave longitudinal survey conducted in Chile with an 18 months lag. This was an approximately nationally representative sample of residents from culturally diverse communities. The aim of the study was to identify protective and adverse factors that are related to the development of depressive symptoms in Indigenous people. It was hypothesized that perceived social support would be negatively related to the development of depressive symptoms and that perceived discrimination would be positively associated with depressive symptoms, so that being on the receiving end of discrimination would make the manifestation of depressive symptoms more likely. Social support and perceived discrimination were themselves predicted to be affected by acculturation preferences and skin pigmentation. It was hypothesized that a positive acculturation orientation towards both the Indigenous group and members of non‐Indigenous majority society would be associated with more perceived social support. Hence, preference for culture maintenance and preference for cross‐group contact were expected to be positively related to social support. Further, it was hypothesized that darker skin pigmentation would be associated with more experiences of discrimination. Taken together, two processes were expected to affect depressive symptomatology: a protective effect of acculturation preferences mediated by social support and a deleterious effect of pigmentation mediated by experiences of discrimination. Results confirmed the predictions cross‐sectionally but longitudinal effects were only found for the deleterious effect of pigmentation; the protective effect of acculturation preferences was notably weaker over time. These findings have both theoretical and applied implications.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

Reference77 articles.

1. American Psychological Association(2021).Racial and ethnic identity. Retrieved 2021‐12‐23 fromhttps://apastyle.apa.org/style‐grammar‐guidelines/bias‐free‐language/racial‐ethnic‐minorities

2. APA. (2021).Summary of the clinical practice guideline for the treatment of depression across three age cohorts.American Psychologist.https://0‐doi‐org.catalogue.libraries.london.ac.uk/10.1037/amp0000904

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