Department of Sociology and Environmental Science & Policy Program, Chapman University.
Department of Sociology, Sonoma State University.
Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol. 2018 Jan;24(1):126-138. doi: 10.1037/cdp0000169. Epub 2017 Jun 26.
Family relationships, widely recognized as core to Latino cultures, are known to vary for Latina/o immigrants based on time in the United States. Less is known about (a) how acculturation explains differences in family relationships by time in the US, and (b) whether acculturative stressors influence different aspects of immigrants' family relationships. Drawing on an expanded acculturation framework, we explore whether and how attitudinal familism, family contact, and family conflict among immigrant Latina/os vary based on acculturation and acculturative stressors.
Using nationally representative data on foreign-born Latina/os (National Latino and Asian American Study; N = 1,618), ordered logistic and OLS regression analyses examined whether differences in family relationships by time in the US are explained by acculturation factors, and whether acculturative stressors are associated with family relationships when controlling for other important sociodemographic factors.
Accounting for acculturation reduces the effect of time in the US on attitudinal familism and family conflict to nonsignificance. Spanish language proficiency and ethnic identity are associated with higher attitudinal familism, while English proficiency is associated with increased family conflict. Additionally, acculturative stressors (involuntary context of exit, hostile context of reception, limited origin country ties) are associated with lower attitudinal familism and higher conflict.
Results highlight the importance of (a) examining the ways that migration influences multiple aspects of family relationships, (b) adopting a more comprehensive acculturation framework. Particularly novel are our findings on how acculturative stressors are associated with different family outcomes. (PsycINFO Database Record
家庭关系被广泛认为是拉丁裔文化的核心,而对于拉丁裔移民来说,家庭关系因在美国的时间长短而有所不同。人们对以下方面的了解较少:(a) 文化适应如何根据在美国的时间解释家庭关系的差异,以及 (b) 文化适应压力源是否会影响移民家庭关系的不同方面。本研究以扩展的文化适应框架为基础,探讨了态度家庭主义、家庭联系和家庭冲突在移民拉丁裔中的差异是否以及如何基于文化适应和文化适应压力源而变化。
利用全国代表性的拉丁裔移民数据(国家拉丁裔和亚裔美国人研究;N=1618),有序逻辑回归和 OLS 回归分析检验了家庭关系的差异是否因时间在美国的不同而受到文化适应因素的解释,以及在控制其他重要社会人口因素的情况下,文化适应压力源是否与家庭关系相关。
考虑到文化适应因素,减少了在美国时间对态度家庭主义和家庭冲突的影响,使其变得不显著。西班牙语熟练程度和民族认同与较高的态度家庭主义有关,而英语熟练程度与家庭冲突增加有关。此外,文化适应压力源(退出的非自愿环境、接待的敌对环境、与原籍国联系有限)与较低的态度家庭主义和较高的冲突有关。
研究结果强调了(a)考察移民对家庭关系的多个方面的影响方式,(b)采用更全面的文化适应框架的重要性。特别新颖的是我们关于文化适应压力源如何与不同的家庭结果相关的发现。