| Literature DB >> 27429687 |
Sohyun C Han1, Gayla Margolin1.
Abstract
This study investigated whether having friends who engaged in more prosocial than antisocial behaviors buffered the associations between family-of-origin aggression and later victimization. Adolescent participants (N=125) and their parents reported on different types of family aggression in early adolescence. Approximately 5 years later, adolescents reported on their victimization experiences with dating partners and friends, and their friends' prosocial and antisocial behaviors. Only father-to-child aggression was significantly associated with dating and friend victimization, with stronger risk for females' dating victimization. Moreover, having friends who engaged in more prosocial than antisocial behaviors had both a direct inverse relationship with dating partner victimization. This also buffered the risk for dating victimization associated with father-daughter aggression. Findings suggest that greater attention be paid to the father-daughter relationship and to the importance of having friends who engage in prosocial behaviors in the prevention of adolescents' victimization.Entities:
Keywords: dating victimization; family aggression; father-daughter relationship; friend victimization; prosocial friends
Year: 2015 PMID: 27429687 PMCID: PMC4943841 DOI: 10.1007/s40653-015-0075-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Adolesc Trauma ISSN: 1936-1521