Cultural Efficacy: Responding to Native American Indian Youth Deviance in A Tribal Community

Authors

  • Julie C. Abril Division of Victimology, American Society of Criminology.

Keywords:

Cultural, native, American, Indian, youth, deviance, tribal community

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to understand if a cultural values- and identity-based construct is relevant to understanding tribal community members when they decide to respond to violations of community mores and norms of conduct when such arise.  Data from the Southern Ute Indian Community Safety Survey, a USDOJ-sponsored study of crime and violence in one rural Native American Indian tribal community were used to create two new constructs for understanding tribal community behavior.  Using principal component factor and linear regression analyses, it was found that either a Native American Indian identity- or a cultural values-based construct are well-suited to understanding deviance and responses to such within tribal populations.  Implications of this study may help realign the paradigm of community research.

 

Published

2026-01-11

How to Cite

Abril, J. C. (2026). Cultural Efficacy: Responding to Native American Indian Youth Deviance in A Tribal Community . Dialogues in Humanities and Social Sciences, 4(1), 39–70. Retrieved from https://dialogueshss.com/index.php/DHSS/article/view/51

Issue

Section

Articles