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Juggling multiple racial identities: Malleable racial identification and psychological well-being.
113
Citations
39
References
2009
Year
EthnicityLower Psychological HealthSocial PsychologyRacial PrejudiceEducationMultiple Racial IdentitiesSocial SciencesPsychologyRaceIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Cultural IdentityAfrican American StudiesRacial GroupIdentity IssuePsychological HealthMinority StressSocial IdentityRacialization StudiesApplied Social PsychologyIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Psychosocial ResearchInterracial RelationshipCultureMultiracial People
The authors examined the link between malleable racial identification and psychological well-being among self-identified multiracial adults. Malleable racial identification refers to the tendency to identify with different racial identities across different social contexts. Results across three studies suggested that malleable racial identification was associated with lower psychological well-being. Study 2 found that unstable regard (i.e., fluctuating private regard about their multiracial background) was the mechanism through which malleable racial identification predicted lower psychological health. Results of Study 3 suggested that dialectical self-views played an important moderating role that determines whether malleability is associated with negative psychological outcomes. The present studies uniquely show that malleable racial identification among multiracial people is maladaptive for psychological health, but that this may depend on whether or not people have tolerance for ambiguity and inconsistency in the self.
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