| Literature DB >> 27725843 |
Jennifer E Lansford1, Marc H Bornstein2, Kirby Deater-Deckard3, Kenneth A Dodge1, Suha M Al-Hassan4, Dario Bacchini5, Anna Silvia Bombi6, Lei Chang7, Bin-Bin Chen8, Laura Di Giunta6, Patrick S Malone1, Paul Oburu9, Concetta Pastorelli6, Ann T Skinner1, Emma Sorbring10, Laurence Steinberg11, Sombat Tapanya12, Liane Peña Alampay13, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado14, Arnaldo Zelli15.
Abstract
International research on parenting and child development can advance our understanding of similarities and differences in how parenting is related to children's development across countries. Challenges to conducting international research include operationalizing culture, disentangling effects within and between countries, and balancing emic and etic perspectives. Benefits of international research include testing whether findings regarding parenting and child development replicate across diverse samples, incorporating cultural and contextual diversity to foster more inclusive and representative research samples and investigators than has typically occurred, and understanding how children develop in proximal parenting and family and distal international contexts.Entities:
Keywords: child development; culture; international research; parenting
Year: 2016 PMID: 27725843 PMCID: PMC5054977 DOI: 10.1111/cdep.12186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Dev Perspect ISSN: 1750-8592