| Literature DB >> 31865926 |
W Andrew Rothenberg1,2, Jennifer E Lansford1, Liane Peña Alampay3, Suha M Al-Hassan4, Dario Bacchini5, Marc H Bornstein6, Lei Chang7, Kirby Deater-Deckard8, Laura Di Giunta9, Kenneth A Dodge1, Patrick S Malone1, Paul Oburu10, Concetta Pastorelli9, Ann T Skinner1, Emma Sorbring11, Laurence Steinberg12,13, Sombat Tapanya14, Liliana Maria Uribe Tirado15, Saengduean Yotanyamaneewong14.
Abstract
This study used data from 12 cultural groups in 9 countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and United States; N = 1,315) to investigate bidirectional associations between parental warmth and control, and child externalizing and internalizing behaviors. In addition, the extent to which these associations held across mothers and fathers and across cultures with differing normative levels of parent warmth and control were examined. Mothers, fathers, and children completed measures when children were ages 8 to 13. Multiple-group autoregressive cross-lagged structural equation models revealed that evocative child-driven effects of externalizing and internalizing behavior on warmth and control are ubiquitous across development, cultures, mothers, and fathers. Results also reveal that parenting effects on child externalizing and internalizing behaviors, though rarer than child effects, extend into adolescence when examined separately in mothers and fathers. Father-based parent effects were more frequent than mother effects. Most parent- and child-driven effects appear to emerge consistently across cultures. The rare culture-specific parenting effects suggested that occasionally the effects of parenting behaviors that run counter to cultural norms may be delayed in rendering their protective effect against deleterious child outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: control; culture; externalizing; internalizing; warmth
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31865926 PMCID: PMC7308194 DOI: 10.1017/S0954579419001214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Psychopathol ISSN: 0954-5794