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What is Structural Power

Addressing Issues of Systemic Racism During Turbulent Times
Involves constitutive relations in which one more powerful actor constitutes the identity, preferences, and capabilities of the other actor(s).
Published in Chapter:
Structural Power, Systemic Poverty, and Entrenchment Among African American Males
Kevin Granderson (University of St. Thomas, USA)
Copyright: © 2022 |Pages: 24
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-8532-0.ch013
Abstract
Poverty and structural power are immensely broad phenomena shaping economic and social architectures of societies globally. However, among the depth of complex mechanisms covertly functioning to perpetuate poverty, this chapter identifies structural power as one of the critical social constructs influencing systemic poverty. To explore structural power as a social force influencing systemic poverty, as a conceptual framework, and as means to support the overtone of social injustice, throughout this chapter an adaptation of the adverse childhood experiences (ACE) model is used. Through a more narrowed approach, the researcher uses the ACE model to explore structural power and systemic poverty through four experiential factors: educational, social, physical, and psychological. The experiences are motived by structural power and defined within the context of systemic poverty to explore the influence of those experiences on entrenchment of African American males later in adulthood.
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