1. Systemic White Supremacy: U.S. State Policy, Policing, Discrimination, and Suicidality Across Race and Sexual Identity.
- Author
-
English, Devin, Oshin, Linda A., Lopez, Felix Gabriel, Smith, Justin C., Busby, Danielle R., and Anestis, Michael D.
- Subjects
- *
RACE identity , *WHITE supremacy , *SUICIDE risk factors , *HETEROSEXUALS , *SUICIDAL ideation , *SUICIDAL behavior - Abstract
Although suicide rates are stable or decreasing among White communities, rates are increasing among Black communities, a trend that appears to be disproportionately affecting Black lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) people. To understand the structural drivers and mechanisms of these trends, we examined associations between U.S. state-level racist and heterosexist criminal legal policies and policing, discrimination, and suicidality among White and Black, heterosexual and LGBQ, communities. We recruited 5,064 participants in 2021 using online census-driven quota sampling. Structural equation modeling estimated associations from objective indicators of racist and heterosexist criminal legal policies to self-reported police stops, discrimination, and suicidal ideation and behavior. For White heterosexual participants, racist (β = −.22, SE = 0.03, p <.001) and heterosexist (β = −.26, SE = 0.03, p <.001) policies were negatively associated with police stops. For White LGBQ participants, racist and heterosexist policies were not significantly associated with police stops. For Black heterosexual participants, racist (β =.30, SE = 0.11, p =.005), but not heterosexist, policies were positively associated with police stops. For Black LGBQ participants, racist (β =.57, SE = 0.08, p <.001) and heterosexist (β =.65, SE = 0.09, p <.001) policies were positively associated with police stops which, in turn, were positively associated with discrimination and suicidal ideation and behavior. Results provide evidence that racist and heterosexist state policies are linked to policing and interpersonal drivers of suicide inequities and suggest that repealing/preventing oppressive policies should be a suicide prevention imperative. General Scientific Summary: This study suggests that racist and heterosexist state policies protect against suicide risk for White heterosexual communities, but increase suicide risk among Black lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) communities. The results indicate these forms of structural oppression are protective for White heterosexual communities because they decrease the likelihood of police stops and discrimination. The same policies increase the likelihood of police stops and discrimination and, in turn, suicide risk for Black LGBQ communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF