Maxwell Christopher D, Maxwell Sheila Royo
Michigan State University, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2003 Dec;18(12):1432-51. doi: 10.1177/0886260503258034.
The effects of family violence on children's aggressive behaviors have been the focus of much research. However, results have been equivocal in at least the following three areas: (a) the specific effects on aggression of child-directed violence versus child-witnessed violence, (b) the salience of family violence as an explanation of aggression when other theoretically relevant explanations of aggression are controlled (i.e., peers, attachments, or moral beliefs), and (c) the gender-specific effects of family violence. Using a probability sample of adolescents from a medium-sized city in the Philippines, this article assesses the effects of child-directed and child-witnessed violence between parents on aggressive behaviors of adolescents while controlling for theoretically relevant explanations of aggression. Results show that child-witnessed and child-directed violence are positively and significantly related to self-reported aggression, that child-witnessed violence accounts for most of the variance in adolescent aggression, and that neither measures of family violence interacts with gender.
家庭暴力对儿童攻击性行为的影响一直是众多研究的焦点。然而,至少在以下三个方面的结果尚无定论:(a)针对儿童的暴力与儿童目睹的暴力对攻击行为的具体影响;(b)当控制了其他与攻击行为理论相关的解释(即同伴、依恋或道德信念)时,家庭暴力作为攻击行为解释的显著性;(c)家庭暴力的性别特异性影响。本文采用菲律宾一个中等城市青少年的概率样本,在控制与攻击行为理论相关解释的同时,评估父母之间针对儿童的暴力和儿童目睹的暴力对青少年攻击行为的影响。结果表明,儿童目睹的暴力和针对儿童的暴力与自我报告的攻击行为呈显著正相关,儿童目睹的暴力占青少年攻击行为差异的大部分,且家庭暴力的测量指标与性别均无交互作用。