Beyond minority stress: Toward a multidimensional psychology of trans/nonbinary gender
- PMID: 36525910
- DOI: 10.1016/j.copsyc.2022.101515
Beyond minority stress: Toward a multidimensional psychology of trans/nonbinary gender
Abstract
Although research that documents minority stress caused to LGBTQ + people supports needed advocacy, it can concomitantly cause harm to communities by portraying them as depleted and powerless. This review article assesses if and how researchers who study minority stress also center interpersonal functions of gender expression that are agentic for trans/nonbinary (TNB) people. These functions were coded in the qualitative research related to minority stress for TNB people over the last five years. Findings revealed that while most interpersonal functions of gender were described rarely, especially those associated with TNB communities of color, damage-centered perspectives were common. Damage-centered perspectives were common. We charge the field to expand its scope of inquiry, center functionalist and agency-focused research, and to develop a multidimensional psychology of gender.
Keywords: Damage-centered research; Interpersonal; Minority stress; Qualitative; Review; Transgender.
Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflicts of interest.
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