98%
921
2 minutes
20
A substantial minority of adolescents experience and use dating violence in their sexual and/or romantic relationships. Limited attention has been paid to exploring theory-driven questions about use and experience of adolescent dating violence (ADV), restricting knowledge about promising prevention targets for diverse groups of youth. To address this gap, this paper investigates whether factors tied to power imbalances (bullying, risk of social marginalization) are associated with patterns of ADV victimization and perpetration in a large sample of Canadian mid-adolescents. We used data from the 2017/2018 Health-Behavior in School-Aged Children (HBSC) study, a nationally representative sample of Canadian youth. Our study was comprised of adolescents who were in grades 9 or 10, and who had dated in the past 12 months (N = 3779). We assessed multiple forms of ADV and bullying victimization and perpetration. We also included six variables assessing adolescents' risk of social marginalization: gender, race/ethnicity, immigration status, family structure, food insecurity, and family affluence. We used latent class analysis to explore the ways adolescents experience and use different forms of ADV, and then examined whether factors tied to power imbalances (bullying, social marginalization) were associated with classes of ADV. Three ADV classes emerged in our sample: uninvolved (65.7%), psychological and cyber victimization only (28.9%), and mutual violence (5.4%). Bullying was most strongly associated with the mutual violence class, suggesting a transformation of power from peer to romantic contexts. Social marginalization variables were associated with ADV patterns in different ways, highlighting the need to use a critical and anti-oppressive lens in ADV research and prevention initiatives.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9709543 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/08862605221092072 | DOI Listing |
Drug Alcohol Depend
August 2025
Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Health, Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota, 717 Delaware St. SE, Minneapolis, MN 55414, United States. Electronic address:
Purpose: Cannabis use is common in adolescence and has been associated with negative health effects, and higher prevalence has been seen among marginalized youth. Research has not examined regular use or attitudes promoting use, particularly taking an approach grounded in intersectionality and minority stressors. The present study examines how regular cannabis use, perceptions of risk, approval from parents and friends, and peer norms of use differ across multiple social positions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Professional identity plays a critical role in the career development of male postgraduate nursing students, particularly in contexts where gender imbalance and social stereotypes persist.
Objective: This study explores how the clinical professional identity of male nursing postgraduates is perceived and constructed through social media discourse in China.
Design: A qualitative study using content analysis of social media discourse, supported by sentiment classification and clustering algorithms.
Front Sociol
August 2025
Centre for Ethics and Poverty Research, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria.
This paper analyzes recognition as a temporal phenomenon. It seeks to better understand how the temporality of recognition-that is, when it is demanded, received, and given, and for how long-is structured in modern societies, and what the consequences are when these temporal structures erode or collapse. To this end, the paper focuses on two social processes: poverty and the precarization of work.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Public Health
September 2025
Business School, Xiamen Institute of Technology, Xiamen, China.
Introduction: In developing countries like Pakistan, the prevalence of malnutrition embodies a multifaceted development challenge, intricately linked to structural inequalities, with disproportionate burdens among socioeconomically and geographically disadvantaged populations.
Methods: Drawing on the most recent Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey (2017-18), this study examines the magnitude of child undernutrition disparities across wealth quintiles and geographic regions. This study employs the Concentration Index (CI) with decomposition analysis, alongside Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition as robust.
Aging Ment Health
September 2025
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Objectives: Social determinants of health (SDoH), including structural racism and economic marginalization, shape mental health outcomes but are frequently conceptualized at a level too broad for direct clinical intervention. In contrast, health-related social needs (HRSNs), such as food insecurity and housing instability, represent more proximal and actionable targets within clinical and community-based settings. Despite growing recognition of their importance, the relationship between HRSNs and depression among structurally marginalized older adults remains under explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF