Hardie Jessica Halliday, Seltzer Judith A
Hunter College, CUNY.
University of California-Los Angeles.
Soc Forces. 2016 Sep;95(1):321-354. doi: 10.1093/sf/sow033. Epub 2016 Apr 25.
Parents play a key role in launching their children into adulthood. Differences in the resources they provide their children have implications for perpetuating patterns of family inequality. Using data on 6,962 young adults included in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, we examine differences in the support parents provide to young adult children by immigrant status and race/ethnicity and whether and how those differences are explained by parent resources and young adult resources and roles. Immigrant status and race/ethnicity are associated with patterns of support in complex ways. We find that racial/ethnic and immigrant disparities in perceptions of support, financial support, and receiving advice from parents about education or employment are explained by family socioeconomic resources. Group differences in whether young adults say they would turn to a parent for advice and coresidence persist after accounting for these factors, however. Young adult resources and roles also shape parental support of young adults in the transition to adulthood, but taking account of these characteristics does not explain immigrant and racial/ethnic group differences. Our findings highlight the need to consider both race/ethnicity and immigrant status to understand family relationships and sources of support.
父母在子女步入成年的过程中起着关键作用。他们为子女提供的资源差异对家庭不平等模式的延续具有影响。利用1997年全国青年纵向调查中6962名青年的数据,我们考察了父母根据移民身份和种族/族裔为成年子女提供支持的差异,以及这些差异是否以及如何由父母资源、青年资源和角色来解释。移民身份和种族/族裔与支持模式存在复杂的关联。我们发现,家庭社会经济资源可以解释在对支持的认知、经济支持以及从父母那里获得关于教育或就业的建议方面的种族/族裔和移民差异。然而,在考虑这些因素之后,青年是否表示会向父母寻求建议以及是否与父母同住方面的群体差异仍然存在。青年资源和角色在向成年过渡过程中也会影响父母对青年的支持,但考虑这些特征并不能解释移民和种族/族裔群体差异。我们的研究结果凸显了在理解家庭关系和支持来源时需要同时考虑种族/族裔和移民身份。