Login / Signup

Critical social media literacy buffers the impact of online racism on internalized racism among racially minoritized emerging adults.

Brian TaeHyuk KeumAndrew Young Choi
Published in: Journal of counseling psychology (2024)
Critical social media literacy-the ability to critically evaluate and interpret racist social media content (critical consumption) and to produce and disseminate antiracist social media content (critical prosumption)-may help counter the negative psychological consequences of online racism, including internalized racism. We examined whether critical social media literacy (critical consumption and prosumption) buffered the association between online racism and internalized racism. We conducted latent moderated structural equation modeling to analyze online convenience data from 338 racially minoritized emerging adults ( M age = 23.28; Asian, n = 96; Black, n = 108; Latine, n = 118). Greater exposure to online racism was associated with significantly higher levels of internalized racism; critical consumption weakened this association, while critical prosumption did not. Results suggested that critical social media literacy, particularly consumption-the intellectual basis and analytical skills to apprehend racist digital content-can be effective in mitigating the internalized racism linked to online racism among racially minoritized emerging adults. Implications include translating these findings into antiracist interventions to counter online racism and its deleterious behavioral health consequences. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases
  • social media
  • health information
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • risk assessment
  • emergency department
  • deep learning
  • adverse drug
  • climate change
  • drug induced
  • big data
  • patient reported