1. Discrimination, Parent-Adolescent Conflict, and Peer Intimacy: Examining Risk and Resilience in Mexican-Origin Youths' Adjustment Trajectories.
- Author
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Delgado MY, Nair RL, Updegraff KA, and Umaña-Taylor AJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, United States ethnology, Young Adult, Adolescent Behavior ethnology, Depression ethnology, Friends ethnology, Interpersonal Relations, Mexican Americans statistics & numerical data, Peer Group, Risk-Taking, Social Discrimination ethnology
- Abstract
Peer discrimination and parent-adolescent conflict in early adolescence were examined as predictors of depressive symptoms and risky behaviors from early to late adolescence using four waves of data over an 8-year period from a sample of 246 Mexican-origin adolescents (M
Time 1 age = 12.55, SD = 0.58; 51% female). The buffering effect of friendship intimacy and moderating role of adolescent gender were tested. Higher levels of discrimination and conflict in early adolescence were associated with higher initial levels of depressive symptoms and risky behaviors in early adolescence and stability through late adolescence. For females who reported higher than average discrimination, friendship intimacy had a protective effect on their depressive symptoms., (© 2017 The Authors. Child Development © 2017 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.)- Published
- 2019
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