1 / 7

MEN AND COMMUNITIES :

MEN AND COMMUNITIES : AFRICAN-AMERICAN MALES AND THE WELL-BEING OF CHILDREN, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORHOODS Prepared for The Dellums Commission By James B. Hyman, Ph.D., Inc. Rationale: Why is this important? Community poverty Macro (communal) vs. Micro (Individual) Strategies

Jims
Download Presentation

MEN AND COMMUNITIES :

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MEN AND COMMUNITIES: AFRICAN-AMERICAN MALES AND THE WELL-BEING OF CHILDREN, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORHOODS Prepared for The Dellums Commission By James B. Hyman, Ph.D., Inc.

  2. Rationale: Why is this important? • Community poverty • Macro (communal) vs. Micro (Individual) Strategies • Interventions with Multiplier Effects

  3. Nine Propositions: Families, Children and Neighborhoods do Better when: • Men and Women Marry • Men do well Economically • Men Pursue Education • Men Accept Their Fatherhood Roles • Men Are Sexually Responsible • Men Eschew Crime and Violence • Men Avoid the Sale and Use of Drugs • Men are not Incarcerated

  4. Conclusion: What men do is important to community well-being. Intervention Approaches: Bad Formulation: • We need to find a way to get black men to “act right.” All too easy. All too simple, All very wrong. Better Formulation: • The fortunes and conditions of black men are not unique to them. • Much of the status and condition of black men is structurally imposed. • We need to examine behaviors– the “choices” black men make that determine whether they surmount or succumb to these structural impediments.

  5. The challenge Extremely complicated: simultaneous and inter-dependent. Education; income and earnings; marriage, fatherhood and family formation; crime and incarceration; child, youth and community development are all linked. Need a map to navigate these relationships. Defining question: Can we find a way to better understand the connections between these variables and their place in determining the extent, the manners, and the mechanisms through which men affect the well-being of poor communities?

  6. A. Societal Expectations B. Opportunity Structure C. Male Choices and Behaviors D. Expected Impacts on Children, Families & Neighborhoods (CFN) E. Community Health and Well-Being F. Feedback Loop to Societal Expectations B1 C1 D1 Individual Endowment and Disposition Asset Accumulation w/ Respect to: Positive CFN Well-Being Outcomes Human Capital Phys/Mental Health Social Networks Pos. Youth Devel Strong Families Pos. Neighborhood Climate A B2 F Prescribed Male Roles Macro-Social Structural Forces Impact on Community Well-Being Adaptations in Prescribed Male Roles Worker Family Supporter Civic Participant B3 D2 C2 Institutional Structural Forces Social Disinvestment w/ Respect to: Negative CFN Well-Being Outcomes Human Capital Phys/Mental Health Social Networks Troubled Youth Fragile Families Disinvested Neighborhoods The Impact of Males on the Well-Being Of Children, Families, Neighborhoods (CFN) and Communities Health: Physical/Mental Supports: Community/Family Values: Cultural/Spiritual Competence: Intellectual/Social Racism Economics (Globalism) Policy/Politics Geography Econ Growth/Stability Political Voice/Power Social Stability Education – Public Schools Medicine – Health/Mental Health Workplace – Economic Security Law/Justice – Safety, Civil Rights Media – Communications

  7. Implications Need to intervene in ways that “condition” male choices (e.g., at Node B: Opportunity Structure) Community-level intervention (at node B1: Individual Endowment and Disposition)

More Related