Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, United States.
Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, United States.
Adv Child Dev Behav. 2019;57:235-279. doi: 10.1016/bs.acdb.2019.05.004. Epub 2019 Jun 11.
The intersection of SES and race-ethnicity impact youth development at the family and neighborhood levels. The confluence of neighborhood structural and social characteristics intersects to impact parenting multiple ways. Within lower-income neighborhoods, there is variability in economic and racial-ethnic demographics and social characteristics and a multitude of different lived experiences. We use a person-centered approach to understand how a plurality of neighborhood social characteristics shape parents' ethnic-racial socialization and monitoring strategies, normative parenting practices for diverse families. With 144 African American and Latino families in a new destination context-areas lacking an enduring historical and economic presence of same-ethnic populations-we examined whether we could replicate neighborhood profiles found in other neighborhood contexts using four neighborhood social process indicators (i.e., connectedness, cohesion and trust, informal social control, and problems), identified family- and neighborhood-level predictors of profiles, and explored differences in ethnic-racial socialization and parental monitoring knowledge by profile. We replicated three neighborhood profiles-integral (high on all positive social dynamics and low problems), anomic (low on all positive social dynamics and high problems), and high problems/positive relationships. Caregivers in these profiles differed in family SES and neighborhood disadvantage such that those in anomic neighborhoods had the lowest income-to-needs ratio whereas those in integral neighborhoods experienced the highest neighborhood disadvantage and lowest proportion of Hispanic residents. Egalitarianism, an ethnic-racial socialization message, and parental monitoring levels differed by neighborhood. Findings suggest African American and Latino families' unique experiences in a new destination context, signaling a complex interplay between race-ethnicity, SES, and place.
社会经济地位(SES)和种族-民族因素的交叉影响着家庭和邻里层面的青年发展。邻里结构和社会特征的融合以多种方式影响着父母的养育方式。在低收入社区,经济和种族-民族人口统计数据以及社会特征存在差异,也存在着多种不同的生活经历。我们采用一种以人为中心的方法来理解多种邻里社会特征如何塑造父母的种族-民族社会化和监督策略,以及不同家庭的规范养育实践。在一个新的目的地环境中,我们对 144 个非裔美国人和拉丁裔家庭进行了研究,这些地区缺乏同种族群体的持久历史和经济基础,我们考察了是否可以使用四个邻里社会过程指标(即联系、凝聚力和信任、非正式社会控制和问题)复制在其他邻里环境中发现的邻里特征,确定了家庭和邻里层面的特征预测因素,并探讨了特征不同的种族-民族社会化和父母监督知识的差异。我们复制了三种邻里特征——完整型(所有积极社会动态高,问题低)、失范型(所有积极社会动态低,问题高)和高问题/积极关系型。这些特征中的照顾者在家庭 SES 和邻里劣势方面存在差异,失范型邻里的收入与需求比最低,而完整型邻里的邻里劣势最高,西班牙裔居民比例最低。平等主义是一种种族-民族社会化信息,父母监督水平也因邻里而异。研究结果表明,非裔美国人和拉丁裔家庭在新的目的地环境中的独特经历表明,种族-民族、SES 和地点之间存在着复杂的相互作用。