Aqua 311 - Symposia & Interactive Panels
Jul 14, 2023 09:45 AM - 11:15 AM(America/Los_Angeles)
20230714T0945 20230714T1115 America/Los_Angeles Symposium #3: COVID-19 and Asian Americans: Danger, Resistance, and Asian-Black Solidarity

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a disproportionate adverse impact on communities of color, revealing the deep roots of structural racism in this country. This symposium examines the individual and interpersonal effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on Asian and Black Americans' mental health, critical consciousness development, cross-racial solidarity and activism. In the first presentation, data from a 2021 national needs assessment on Asian Americans (N=3,170) are used to explore the mediating effect of perceived danger on the discrimination-mental health relationship, with ethnicity as a moderator. Given the role of the media in shaping public opinion during the pandemic, the second presentation examines the role of ethnic newspaper and social media consumption in mental health outcomes, intergroup attitudes, and cross-racial solidarity in a sample of 1,078 Asian and 367 Black Americans surveyed in May 2022. The final presentation reports results from a qualitative study that explores Chinese American young adults' (aged 18-26) experiences of negotiating race and ethnic identity development and across the lifespan and the role of pandemic-related events in shaping identity and critical consciousness development.

Aqua 311 - Symposia & Interactive Panels 2023 APA Division 45 Research Conference researchconference@division45.org
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The COVID-19 pandemic has had a disproportionate adverse impact on communities of color, revealing the deep roots of structural racism in this country. This symposium examines the individual and interpersonal effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on Asian and Black Americans' mental health, critical consciousness development, cross-racial solidarity and activism. In the first presentation, data from a 2021 national needs assessment on Asian Americans (N=3,170) are used to explore the mediating effect of perceived danger on the discrimination-mental health relationship, with ethnicity as a moderator. Given the role of the media in shaping public opinion during the pandemic, the second presentation examines the role of ethnic newspaper and social media consumption in mental health outcomes, intergroup attitudes, and cross-racial solidarity in a sample of 1,078 Asian and 367 Black Americans surveyed in May 2022. The final presentation reports results from a qualitative study that explores Chinese American young adults' (aged 18-26) experiences of negotiating race and ethnic identity development and across the lifespan and the role of pandemic-related events in shaping identity and critical consciousness development.

Director of Outreach
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Stanford University
Job Name
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Hunter College Silberman School of Social Work
Professor
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New York University
Associate Professor
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New York University
PhD Student
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University of California, Irvine
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