Individual and Ecological Assets and Thriving Among African American Adolescent Male Gang and Community-Based Organization Members

Author:

Taylor Carl S.,Smith Pamela R.1,Taylor Virgil A.2,von Eye Alexander1,Lerner Richard M.,Balsano Aida Bilalbegovic,Anderson Pamela M.,Banik Rumeli,Almerigi Jason B.3

Affiliation:

1. Michigan State University

2. Urban Ecology Institute

3. Tufts University

Abstract

The third wave of the Overcoming the Odds longitudinal study involves data about individual and ecological developmental assets and thriving among African American male adolescents in inner-city Detroit gangs (N = 43) or in youth development, communitybased organizations (CBO; N = 50). Both groups had comparable levels of either low or high assets across the three waves. Stability in asset levels was not related to either of two measures of thriving or to a second measure of assets. The CBO youth had higher thriving and asset scores. More so for gang youth than CBO youth, there was evidence that asset and thriving scores were interrelated within this wave. Program and policy implications of these group differences are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Life-span and Life-course Studies,Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology

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