Taylor Robert Joseph, Chatters Linda M, Cross Christina J
School of Social Work, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, 1080 S. University St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109.
School of Public Health, School of Social Work, University of Michigan, 1415 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI 48109.
J Marriage Fam. 2021 Oct;83(5):1349-1372. doi: 10.1111/jomf.12783. Epub 2021 Jul 10.
This study examined the correlates of involvement in extended family social support networks among African Americans.
Previous literature has documented the importance of informal social support from extended family members for the African American population. Most research has investigated black-white differences in network involvement or has focused on impoverished African American families. Both approaches conceal important within-group variation in participation among the total African American population.
This study relied on nationally representative data from the African American sub-sample of the National Survey of American Life (n=3,538). It employed ordinary least squares regression analysis to examine the sociodemographic and family factors that are associated with four key measures of involvement in extended family support networks: receiving and providing extended family support, frequency of family contact, and degree of subjective closeness.
African Americans routinely interacted with members of their family, displayed a high degree of family closeness, and exchanged support fairly frequently. Findings also revealed significant variation in network involvement by sociodemographic characteristics: women, younger adults, and Southerners were typically most involved; individuals who experienced greater material hardship, were previously incarcerated, or served in the military reported less involvement. Results also showed that family closeness and family contact were particularly salient factors shaping the extent to which network members engaged in support exchanges.
The magnitude of within-group heterogeneity in network involvement underscores the importance of considering issues of intragroup diversity in the developing literature on African American extended family networks.
本研究探讨了非裔美国人参与大家庭社会支持网络的相关因素。
以往文献记录了大家庭成员提供的非正式社会支持对非裔美国人的重要性。大多数研究调查了网络参与方面的黑白差异,或聚焦于贫困的非裔美国家庭。这两种方法都掩盖了非裔美国总人口中群体内部参与情况的重要差异。
本研究依赖于美国生活全国调查中非裔美国人子样本的具有全国代表性的数据(n = 3538)。它采用普通最小二乘法回归分析来检验与大家庭支持网络参与的四个关键指标相关的社会人口学和家庭因素:接受和提供大家庭支持、家庭联系频率以及主观亲密程度。
非裔美国人经常与家庭成员互动,表现出高度的家庭亲密感,并且相当频繁地交换支持。研究结果还揭示了网络参与在社会人口学特征方面的显著差异:女性、年轻人和南方人通常参与度最高;经历过更大物质困难、曾被监禁或服过兵役的人报告的参与度较低。结果还表明,家庭亲密感和家庭联系是塑造网络成员参与支持交换程度的特别突出的因素。
网络参与中群体内部异质性的程度强调了在关于非裔美人大家庭网络的发展文献中考虑群体内部多样性问题的重要性。