Discrimination and Deaf Adolescents’ Subjective Well-Being: The Role of Deaf Identity

Author:

Ma Yidan123,Xue Weifeng123,Liu Qin4,Xu Yin56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Institute of Education Science ,

2. Leshan Normal University ,

3. Key Laboratory of Personality and Cognition , Leshan Normal University

4. Department of Special Education , Institute of Special Education, Leshan Normal University

5. Department of Sociology & Psychology , School of Public Administration,

6. Sichuan University , School of Public Administration,

Abstract

Abstract This study tested the influence of Deaf identity (cognitive identification and affective identification) on the association between perceived deaf discrimination and subjective well-being among Chinese adolescents who are deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH), based on the rejection-identification model. Questionnaires on perceived deaf discrimination, subjective well-being, Deaf identity, and demographic information were completed by 246 DHH students (15–23 years old) from special residential schools in China. The results indicated that: (1) higher level of perceived deaf discrimination was significantly associated with lower level of subjective well-being (direct effect = −0.24, 95% confidence interval [CI] = [−0.37, −0.12], p < .001); (2) there was a significant indirect effect of perceived deaf discrimination on subjective well-being via cognitive identification (indirect effect = −0.07, 95% CI = [−0.12, −0.01], p < .05); and (3) positive affective identification due to increased cognitive identification with Deaf community may help counteract the negative impact of perceived deaf discrimination on subjective well-being (indirect effect = 0.06, 95% CI = [0.03, 0.10], p < .001). These findings further support the notion that the different components of group identification should be examined separately.

Funder

Sichuan Social Science

Leshan Normal University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Education

Reference50 articles.

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