首页> 外文期刊>Journal of youth and adolescence >Examining the Influence of Family Environments on Youth Violence: A Comparison of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Non-Latino Black, and Non-Latino White Adolescents
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Examining the Influence of Family Environments on Youth Violence: A Comparison of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Non-Latino Black, and Non-Latino White Adolescents

机译:考察家庭环境对青年暴力的影响:墨西哥,波多黎各人,古巴,非拉丁美洲黑人和非拉丁美洲白人青少年的比较

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Existing research rarely considers important ethnic subgroup variations in violent behaviors among Latino youth. Thus, their risk for severe violent behaviors is not well understood in light of the immense ethnic and generational diversity of the Latino population in the United States. Grounded in social control theory and cultural analyses of familism, we examine differences in the risk for severe youth violence, as well its associations with family cohesion, parental engagement, adolescent autonomy, household composition, and immigrant generation among Mexican (n = 1,594), Puerto Rican (n = 586), Cuban (n = 488), and non-Latino Black (n = 4,053), and White (n = 9,921) adolescents with data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Results indicate a gradient of risk; White youth had the lowest risk for severe violence and Puerto Rican youth had the highest risk compared to all other racial/ethnic subgroups. Within-group analysis indicates that family factors are not universally protective or risk-inducing. While family cohesion decreased the risk of severe violence among all groups, parental engagement was associated with increased risk among Blacks and Whites, and adolescent autonomy was associated with increased risk among Puerto Ricans and Cubans. In addition, Cuban and White adolescents who lived in single parent households or who did not live with their parents, had higher risk for severe violent behaviors than their counterparts who lived in two parent households. Among Latinos, the association of immigrant generation was in opposite directions among Mexicans and Cubans. We conclude that family and immigration factors differentially influence risk for violence among Latino subgroups and highlight the significance of examining subgroup differences and developing intervention strategies that are tailored to the needs of each ethnic subgroup.
机译:现有研究很少考虑拉美裔年轻人的暴力行为中重要的种族亚群变异。因此,鉴于美国拉丁裔人口的巨大种族和世代多样性,人们对其严重暴力行为的风险还没有很好的了解。基于社会控制理论和对家族主义的文化分析,我们研究了严重的青少年暴力风险的差异,以及其与家庭凝聚力,父母亲,父母的参与,青少年的自主权,家庭结构和墨西哥移民产生的关联(n = 1,594),波多黎各人(n = 586),古巴(n = 488)和非拉丁美洲黑人(n = 4,053)和白人(n = 9,921)青少年的数据来自《全国青少年健康纵向研究》。结果表明风险梯度;与所有其他种族/族裔亚组相比,白人青年发生严重暴力的风险最低,而波多黎各青年发生的风险最高。组内分析表明,家庭因素并非普遍具有保护性或风险诱因。虽然家庭凝聚力降低了所有群体之间发生严重暴力的风险,但父母的订婚与黑人和白人之间的风险增加有关,而青少年自治与波多黎各人和古巴人中的风险增加有关。此外,生活在单亲家庭或不与父母同住的古巴和白人青少年发生严重暴力行为的风险要高于生活在两个父母家庭的同伴。在拉丁美洲人中,墨西哥人和古巴人的移民世代关系相反。我们得出的结论是,家庭因素和移民因素对拉丁美洲人子群之间的暴力风险有不同的影响,并强调了研究子群差异和制定适合每个种族子群需求的干预策略的重要性。

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