1. Perceived Social Support from Different Sources and Adolescent Life Satisfaction Across 42 Countries/Regions: The Moderating Role of National-Level Generalized Trust
- Author
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Marlies Maes, Fiona Brooks, Maartje Boer, Riki Tesler, Catrin Finkenauer, Shanshan Bi, Gonneke W. J. M. Stevens, Winneke A. van der Schuur, Katrijn Delaruelle, Charli Eriksson, Leerstoel Finkenauer, and Youth in Changing Cultural Contexts
- Subjects
Male ,Social Sciences ,Psychology, Developmental ,CHILDREN ,050109 social psychology ,Personal Satisfaction ,Empirical Research ,Developmental psychology ,Multilevel regression analysis ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Child ,Sociocultural evolution ,Schools ,05 social sciences ,Socialization ,ASSOCIATION ,National-level generalized trust ,FAMILY ,Legal psychology ,Health psychology ,Different sources of perceived social support ,Female ,Life satisfaction ,HEALTH ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL SCALE ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,OF-FIT INDEXES ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Early adolescents ,STUDENT ADJUSTMENT ,Trust ,Education ,Social support ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,VALIDITY ,Association (psychology) ,METAANALYSIS ,1303 Specialist Studies in Education, 1701 Psychology ,Social Support ,PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES ,North America ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Although previous research established a positive association between perceived social support and adolescent life satisfaction, little is known about the relative importance of different sources of support for adolescent life satisfaction and cross-country variations in this respect. Using large-scale representative samples from the 2017/18 Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study, this study examined to what extent the association between social support and life satisfaction in early adolescence varied across different social sources and countries. Also, it examined whether cross-country variations are explained by national-level generalized trust, a sociocultural factor that shapes adolescent socialization. National-level data were linked to data from 183,918 early adolescents (Mage = 13.56, SD = 1.63, 52% girls) from 42 European and North American countries/regions obtained from HBSC. Multilevel regression analyses yielded a positive association between support from different sources and life satisfaction. The strongest associations were found for support from families, followed by teachers and classmates, and weakest for support from friends. Associations varied across different countries/regions. National-level trust amplified the association between perceived classmate support and adolescent life satisfaction. The revealed cross-country differences open avenues for future cross-cultural research on explanations for cross-cultural differences in the association between social support from different sources and life satisfaction in early adolescence.
- Published
- 2021
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