Riina Elizabeth M, McHale Susan M
The National Center for Children & Families, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
J Fam Issues. 2012 Jul;33(7):851-873. doi: 10.1177/0192513X11423897. Epub 2011 Sep 30.
Grounded in a cultural-ecological perspective, the goals of this study were to examine the implications of young adolescents' experiences of racial discrimination for the quality of relationships with mothers and fathers and to test whether sociocultural processes, such as youth ethnic identity and parents' racial socialization strategies, moderated these linkages. Participants were older and younger adolescents in 176 two-parent African American families who completed questionnaires about their discrimination experiences, ethnic identities, and warmth and conflict in their relationships with parents. Mothers and fathers reported on cultural socialization and preparation for bias practices. Consistent with an emotional spillover hypothesis, discrimination was linked to poorer relationship quality with both mothers and fathers. Youth ethnic identity and mothers' racial socialization moderated discrimination-relationship linkages. Findings were consistent with prior research on discrimination and highlight the protective nature of some sociocultural processes for family relationships.
基于文化生态视角,本研究的目标是考察青少年的种族歧视经历对其与父母关系质量的影响,并检验社会文化过程(如青少年的族群认同和父母的种族社会化策略)是否调节了这些联系。研究参与者为176个双亲非裔美国家庭中的青少年,他们完成了关于歧视经历、族群认同以及与父母关系中的温暖和冲突的问卷调查。母亲和父亲报告了文化社会化以及应对偏见行为的准备情况。与情感溢出假设一致,歧视与青少年与父母的关系质量较差有关。青少年的族群认同和母亲的种族社会化调节了歧视与关系之间的联系。研究结果与先前关于歧视的研究一致,并突出了一些社会文化过程对家庭关系的保护作用。