cover image: Exploring the Trade-Off Between Surviving and Thriving: Heterogeneous Responses to Adversity and Disruptive Events Among Disadvantaged Black Youth

20.500.12592/8cz923v

Exploring the Trade-Off Between Surviving and Thriving: Heterogeneous Responses to Adversity and Disruptive Events Among Disadvantaged Black Youth

1 Jan 2024

This article examines heterogeneity in adverse events and conditions and how low-income African American young adults respond. Although nearly all individuals in the sample report at least one instance of adversity, the nature and frequency of adversity varies, as do the responses. Some individuals see their lives and plans derailed; others engage in more protective strategies. For still others, adversity presents a difficult trade-off between surviving and thriving. We formalize this trade-off as an extension of a basic model of costly human capital investments. The model shows that a rational, fully informed individual facing this brutal trade-off, in an effort to survive the fallout of adversity, may optimally choose not to make high-return investments that promote thriving in the future. Improved policy design would recognize this type of trade-off.
poverty violence human capital qualitative methods adversity mixed methods

Authors

Stefanie DeLuca, Nicholas W. Papageorge, Joseph L. Boselovic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.1.05
ISBN
2377-8253 2377-8261
Published in
United States of America
Rights
© 2024 Russell Sage Foundation. DeLuca, Stefanie, Nicholas W. Papageorge, and Joseph L. Boselovic. 2024. “Exploring the Trade-Off Between Surviving and Thriving: Heterogeneous Responses to Adversity and Disruptive Events Among Disadvantaged Black Youth.” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 10(1): 103–31. DOI: 10.7758/RSF.2024.10.1.05. We thank Kathryn Edin and Susan Clampet-Lundquist, the co–principal investigators with Stefanie DeLuca on the MTO Q10 Transition to Adulthood Study in Baltimore, which provided the interview data we use in this article. We are grateful for the generous support of the Russell Sage Foundation (#1808-07819, ROR: https://ror.org/02yh9se80) and the William T. Grant Foundation (#9031). We also acknowledge the excellent research support of Paige Ackman, Lidie Ataoğuz, Olivia Cigarroa, Jamie Chan, Courtney Colwell, Kendall Dorland, Thelonious Goerz, Matt Gonzalez, Min-Seo Kim, Hannah Lee, Olivia Morse, Lauren Ricci, Jasmine Sausedo

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