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Excavating Culture: Disentangling Ethnic Differences From Contextual Influences in Parenting
Authors:Huynh-Nhu Le  Rosario Ceballo  Ruth Chao  Nancy E Hill  Velma McBride Murry  Ellen E Pinderhughes
Institution:1. George Washington University , hnle@gwu.edu;3. University of Michigan ,;4. University of California, Riverside ,;5. Duke University ,;6. University of Georgia ,;7. Tufts University ,
Abstract:Historically, much of the research on parenting has not disentangled the influences of race/ethnicity, SES, and culture on family functioning and the development of children and adolescents. This special issue addresses this gap by disentangling ethnic differences in parenting behaviors from their contextual influences, thereby deepening our understanding of parenting processes in diverse families. Six members of the Parenting Section of the Study Group on Race, Culture, and Ethnicity (SGRCE) introduce and implement a novel approach toward understanding this question. The goal of this project is to study culturally related processes and the degree to which they predict parenting. An iterative process was employed to delineate the main parenting constructs (warmth, psychological and behavioral control, monitoring, communication, and self-efficacy), cultural processes, and contextual influences, and to coordinate a data analytic plan utilizing individual datasets with diverse samples to answer the research questions.
Keywords:
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