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Links Between Parenting and Internalizing and Externalizing Problems: Cross-Cultural Evidence from Ten Countries

AT. Vazsonyi, AJ. Ksinan, M. Javakhishvili, JM. Scarpate, E. Kahumoku-Fessler

. 2022 ; 53 (4) : 667-683. [pub] 20210322

Language English Country United States

Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

E-resources Online Full text

NLK ProQuest Central from 1997-04-01 to 1 year ago
Medline Complete (EBSCOhost) from 1993-09-01 to 1 year ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest) from 1997-04-01 to 1 year ago
Psychology Database (ProQuest) from 1997-04-01 to 1 year ago
Public Health Database (ProQuest) from 1997-04-01 to 1 year ago

The present study tested the links between perceived maternal and paternal parenting and internalizing and externalizing problems across ten cultures (China, Czech Republic, Hungary, the Netherlands, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan, Turkey, and the United States). Self-report data were collected from N = 12,757 adolescents (Mage = 17.13 years, 48.4% female). Multigroup confirmatory factor analyses and structural equation models tested whether: (1) the six parenting processes (closeness, support, monitoring, communication, peer approval, and conflict; Adolescent Family Process, Short Form (AFP-SF, 18 items) varied across cultures, and (2) the links between parenting processes and measures of internalizing and externalizing problems varied across cultures. Study findings indicated measurement invariance (configural and metric) of both maternal and paternal parenting processes and that the parenting-internalizing/externalizing problems links did not vary across cultures. Findings underscore the ubiquitous importance of parenting processes for internalizing and externalizing problems across diverse Asian, European, Eurasian, and North American cultures.

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