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Increasing Opportunities for Inner-City Youth: The Feasibility of an Economic Empowerment Model in East Harlem and the South Bronx, New York
Authors:Ssewamala Fred M  Sperber Elizabeth  Blake Clair A  Ilic Vilma P
Institution:
  • a Social Work and International Affairs, Columbia University, United States
  • b Columbia University, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, United States
  • c Florida International University (in Miami, FL), United States
  • d Columbia University School of Social Work, United States
  • Abstract:Youth of color are disproportionately likely to grow-up in poor, disadvantaged neighborhoods characterized by high levels of psychosocial stressors and inadequate supportive resources. Poverty and racial minority status correlate with an increased risk of high-school dropout, teen pregnancy, substance abuse, and sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Given these trends, child welfare researchers are developing various interventions to increase the protective resources and social opportunities available to youth of color. This article reports results of a preliminary, qualitative study that investigated the feasibility and acceptability of an economic empowerment intervention in the South Bronx and East Harlem, New York. Using focus groups and brief questionnaires with youth and their parents/guardians (N = 24 dyads), we explored attitudes toward youth educational savings accounts, financial planning classes, and mentorship for inner-city youth. Findings indicate a strong interest in an economic empowerment intervention among adolescents and their caregivers in these communities. These findings have implications for the design of larger-scale research programs that aim to improve inner-city youth's socio-economic wellbeing using economic empowerment models.
    Keywords:Economic empowerment  Urban youth  Focus groups  Harlem  South Bronx  Suubi-Uganda
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