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1.
Am J Community Psychol ; 47(1-2): 98-113, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21103925

ABSTRACT

This study examined family and neighborhood influences relevant to low-income status to determine how they combine to predict the parenting behaviors of Mexican-American mothers and fathers. The study also examined the role of parenting as a mediator of these contextual influences on adolescent internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Study hypotheses were examined in a diverse sample of Mexican-American families in which 750 mothers and 467 fathers reported on their own levels of parental warmth and harsh parenting. Family economic hardship, neighborhood familism values, and neighborhood risk indicators were all uniquely associated with maternal and paternal warmth, and maternal warmth mediated the effects of these contextual influences on adolescent externalizing symptoms in prospective analyses. Parents' subjective perceptions of neighborhood danger interacted with objective indicators of neighborhood disadvantage to influence maternal and paternal warmth. Neighborhood familism values had unique direct effects on adolescent externalizing symptoms in prospective analyses, after accounting for all other context and parenting effects.


Subject(s)
Mental Health , Mexican Americans/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Poverty Areas , Residence Characteristics , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Family/ethnology , Family/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Parent-Child Relations/ethnology , Parenting/ethnology
2.
J Early Adolesc ; 30(4): 567-592, 2010 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20711521

ABSTRACT

This study examined a stress-process model in which stressful life events and association with delinquent peers mediated the relationship of neighborhood disadvantage to Mexican American early adolescents' mental health. We also proposed that child gender, child generation, and neighborhood informal social control would moderate the relationship of neighborhood disadvantage to children's experiences of stressful life events. With data from 738 Mexican American early adolescents, results generally provided support for the theoretical model although the relationships of neighborhood disadvantage to stressful life events and adjustment were weaker than expected. Additional research is needed to corroborate these results and determine why neighborhood disadvantage may have different relationships to adjustment for Mexican American early adolescents than for others.

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