16 results on '"Weisskirch, Robert S"'
Search Results
2. Experiences of Discrimination and Language Brokering: Exploring Risks and Protective Factors.
- Author
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Lazarevic, Vanja, Guan, Shu-Sha Angie, and Weisskirch, Robert S.
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ETHNIC discrimination , *DISCRIMINATORY language , *YOUNG adults , *FAMILY relations , *ETHNICITY , *PUBLIC spaces , *FAMILY conflict , *RACIAL identity of African Americans - Abstract
Objectives: Language brokering (LB) often occurs in public places, putting youth who broker at risk for experiencing discrimination while engaging in brokering. Guided by the risk and resilience theoretical framework, the present study goals were twofold: (a) to examine the association between discrimination and LB, and (b) to explore moderating abilities of ethnic identity and family dynamics. Method: Data were collected from 458 young adults (Mage = 21.36, 80% female). Participants were from a diverse region in the United States, and a majority of them self-identified as Latino (66.2%). Participants were invited to complete a one-time online survey about their LB and family experiences. Results: We found that discrimination was negatively associated with LB for these young people. Specifically, discrimination was related to higher LB burden and higher LB role reversal, and lower LB efficacy. In addition, we found that ethnic–racial identity (ERI) acted as a moderator of LB role reversal against discrimination, and that negative family dynamics moderated the association between discrimination and LB. Positive family dynamics were not successful in buffering against negative effects of discrimination. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that young people who broker seem to be negatively impacted by discrimination. The effects of discrimination on LB role reversal could be alleviated by strong ERI; however, the same is not true for LB burden and LB efficacy. Furthermore, negative family dynamics exacerbated the negative effects of discrimination on LB, and positive family dynamics did not serve as a buffer against discrimination. Implications for those working with language brokers are discussed. Public Significance Statement: Young people who language broker for their parents may experience discrimination. While some factors, such as a strong ethnic–racial identity, can protect against negative effects of discrimination, being involved in family conflict can make the negative effects of discrimination even worse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Association of acculturation with drinking games among Hispanic college students.
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Schwartz, Seth J., Zamboanga, Byron L., Tomaso, Cara C., Kondo, Karli K., Unger, Jennifer B., Weisskirch, Robert S., Ham, Lindsay S., Meca, Alan, Cano, Miguel Ángel, Whitbourne, Susan Krauss, Brittian, Aerika S., Des Rosiers, Sabrina E., Hurley, Eric A., Vazsonyi, Alexander T., and Ravert, Russell D.
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DRINKING games ,ACCULTURATION ,HISPANIC American college students ,ALCOHOL drinking in college ,CULTURE ,ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
Objective: This cross-sectional study was conducted to investigate which components of acculturation relate to drinking games participation among Hispanic college students. We also sought to examine whether the relationships between acculturation and drinking games would differ from the associations between acculturation and other alcohol-related outcomes. Method: A sample of 1,397 Hispanic students aged 18-25 (75% women; 77% US-born) from 30 US colleges and universities completed a confidential online survey. Results: Associations among acculturative processes, drinking games participation, general alcohol consumption, and negative drinking consequences differed across gender. Most significant findings emerged in the domain of cultural practices. For women, US cultural practices were associated with greater general alcohol consumption, drinking games frequency, and amount of alcohol consumed while gaming, whereas for men, US cultural practices were associated with general alcohol consumption and negative drinking consequences. Conclusions: Hispanic and US cultural practices, values, and identifications were differentially associated with drinking games participation, and these associations differed by gender. It is therefore essential for college student alcohol research to examine US culture acquisition and Hispanic culture retention separately and within the domains of cultural practices, values, and identifications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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4. Identity Dimensions and Delated Processes in Emerging Adulthood: Helpful or Harmful?
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Ritchie, Rachel A., Meca, Alan, Madrazo, Vanessa L., Schwartz, Seth J., Hardy, Sam A., Zamboanga, Byron L., Weisskirch, Robert S., Kim, Su Yeong, Whitbourne, Susan Krauss, Ham, Lindsay S., and Lee, Richard M.
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IDENTITY (Psychology) ,ADULTS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,COLLEGE students ,SELF-esteem ,RUMINATION (Cognition) ,HEALTH risk assessment ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Objectives: The current study evaluated the mediatorial role of well-being in the relationship between identity development and psychosocial functioning. Method: A sample of 7,649 undergraduate students (73% female; mean age = 19.95, standard deviation = 1.98; 62% Caucasian) completed measures of personal identity, well-being, internalizing symptoms, externalizing problems, and health-risk behaviors. Results: Results revealed that (a) identity exploration and commitment were negatively associated with internalizing symptoms, health-risk behaviors, and externalizing problems through well-being, (b) ruminative exploration was negatively associated with well-being and positively associated with externalizing problems, and (c) increased levels of ruminative exploration appear more detrimental for men than for women. Conclusion: The study shed light on the mechanisms through which identity processes are related to internalizing symptoms, externalizing problems, and health-risk behaviors. The role of well-being in these associations, and the potentially deleterious "side effects" of exploration and commitment appear to suggest new and important directions for identity research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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5. The American Identity Measure: Development and Validation across Ethnic Group and Immigrant Generation.
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Schwartz, Seth J., Park, Irene J. K., Huynh, Que-Lam, Zamboanga, Byron L., Umaña-Taylor, Adriana J., Lee, Richard M., Rodriguez, Liliana, Kim, Su Yeong, Whitbourne, Susan Kraus, Castillo, Linda G., Weisskirch, Robert S., Vazsonyi, Alexander T., Williams, Michelle K., and Agocha, V. Bede
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GROUP identity ,ETHNIC groups ,IMMIGRANTS ,INTERGROUP relations ,INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
Two studies were designed to validate a measure of American identity for use with diverse ethnic groups. The American Identity Measure (AIM) was created by adapting the Multi-Group Ethnic Identity Measure (MEIM) to refer to exploration and affirmation of individuals' identification with the United States. In Study 1, students from nine U.S. universities (N = 1,773) completed the AIM and the MEIM. Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that the AIM fit the data well and that the factor structures of ethnic and American identity were equivalent. In Study 2 students from 30 U.S. universities (N = 10,573) completed the AIM, a comparison measure of American identity drawn from recent qualitative work, and measures of American cultural practices and individualist values. The factor structure of scores generated by the AIM was equivalent across ethnicity and immigrant generation, and latent mean scores on the AIM were only modestly different across ethnicity and immigrant generation. Whites and later-generation immigrants scored higher on American identity affirmation; Asians and first-generation immigrants scored lowest. The AIM was strongly correlated with the comparison measure of American identity (suggesting convergent validity) and with American cultural behaviors (suggesting construct validity). American identity was only weakly associated with individualist values, perhaps implying that American identification may not be as closely intertwined with rugged individualism as previously thought. These results are discussed in light of the availability of American identity for individuals from various ethnic backgrounds as well as the implications of national identity for intergroup relations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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6. Dimensions of Acculturation: Associations With Health Risk Behaviors Among College Students From Immigrant Families.
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Schwartz, Seth J., Weisskirch, Robert S., Zamboanga, Byron L., Castillo, Linda G., Ham, Lindsay S., Huynh, Que-Lam, Park, Irene J. K., Roxanne, Donovan, Su Yeong Kim, Vernon, Michael, Davis, Matthew J., and Cano, Miguel A.
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ACCULTURATION , *RISK-taking behavior , *IMMIGRANTS , *ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
In the present study, we examined a bidimensional model of acculturation (which includes both heritage and U.S. practices, values, and identifications) in relation to hazardous alcohol use, illicit drug use, unsafe sexual behavior, and impaired driving. A sample of 3,251 first- and second-generation immigrant students from 30 U.S. colleges and universities completed measures of behavioral acculturation; cultural values (individualism, collectivism, and self-construal); ethnic and U.S. identity; and patterns of alcohol and drug use, engagement in potentially unsafe sexual activities, and driving while (Or riding with a driver who was) intoxicated. Results indicate that heritage practices and collectivist values were generally protective against health risk behaviors, with collectivist values most strongly and consistently protective. Nonetheless, heritage identifications were positively associated with sexual risk taking for Hispanics. U.S. practices, values, and identifications were not consistently related to risk behavior participation. Results are discussed in terms of bidimensional approaches to acculturation, the immigrant paradox, and implications for counseling practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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7. FACILITATING GLOBAL E-COMMERCE: A COMPARISON OF CONSUMERS' WILLINGNESS TO DISCLOSE PERSONAL INFORMATION ONLINE IN THE U.S. AND IN INDIA.
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Gupta, Babita, Iyer, Lakshmi S., and Weisskirch, Robert S.
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CONSUMERS ,RIGHT of privacy ,ELECTRONIC commerce ,DELIVERY of goods ,CROSS-cultural differences - Abstract
Consumers' privacy and security concerns are magnified as companies rely on worldwide networks for electronic commerce. Global businesses that can persuade consumers to disclose their personal information online are more likely to provide better service and product delivery. In this research, we conducted an empirical study of 809 consumers in the U.S. and India to investigate their online information disclosing behavior and their intentions to take and execute protective measures during online interactions. Results suggest that there are significant differences between American and Indian consumers with regards to their willingness to disclose personal information (WDPI), and their intentions and actions for privacy and security protection. We find that Indian consumers are more willing to disclose potentially sensitive personal information, and U.S. consumers intend to and engage in higher passive privacy protection actions compared to Indians. Thus, cultural differences influence consumers? WDPI and their online privacy protection behavior. These findings have implications for companies to consider cultural differences when conducting global e-commerce, indicating a need for a localization approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
8. Parenting by Cell Phone: Parental Monitoring of Adolescents and Family Relations.
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Weisskirch, Robert S.
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PARENT-child relationships , *FAMILY relations , *SUPPORT (Domestic relations) , *STATISTICAL correlation , *REGRESSION analysis , *MOBILE communication systems , *CELL phones ,TEENAGERS & society - Abstract
Cellular phones provide a means for parents to monitor and request information about whereabouts, associates, and current activities from adolescents. Simultaneously, adolescents can communicate with parents to inform them of activities and to solicit support or they can also choose to nondisclose. The frequency, duration, and nature of calls may relate to parents’ and to adolescents’ perceptions of truthfulness and family relationships. 196 dyads (13% father–son, 11% father–daughter, 30% mother–son, and 46% mother–daughter) completed a questionnaire indicating cell phone use, their truthfulness of activities, the nature of their calls to one another, and family relationships. The parents were, on average, 45.38 years old (SD = 6.35) and were 83% Euroamerican, 9% Asian American, 3% Latino, 3% African American, 2% Mixed ethnicity, and 1% American Indian. The adolescents were, on average, 16.25 years old (SD = 1.17) and were 77% Euroamerican, 9% Asian American, 4% Latino, 3% African American, 8% Mixed ethnicity, and .5% American Indian. Correlational analyses revealed that parents who called more frequently reported less truthfulness when speaking to their adolescents via cell phone. Greater frequency in parental calls also was associated with less adolescent-reported truthfulness. From multiple regression analyses, for parents, calls when upset were associated with less parental knowledge and poorer family relations. For adolescents, the same was true; however, adolescents who made calls seeking social support and to ask and confer with parents reported greater perceived parental knowledge and better family relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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9. Investigating the Structure and Measurement Invariance of the Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure in a Multiethnic Sample of College Students.
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Yap, Stevie C. Y., Donnellan, M. Brent, Su Yeong Kim, Zamboanga, Byron L., Lee, Richard M., Whitboume, Susan Krauss, Schwartz, Seth J., Castillo, Linda G., Weisskirch, Robert S., Park, Irene J. K., and Vazsonyi, Alexander T.
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ASIANS , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *BLACK people , *CHI-squared test , *COLLEGE students , *FACTOR analysis , *GROUP identity , *HISPANIC Americans , *PSYCHOLOGY of Minorities , *RESEARCH funding , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *WHITE people , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
In this article, we evaluate the factor structure of the Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure (MEIM; Phinney, 1992) and test whether the MEIM exhibits measurement invariance across ethnic groups taken from a diverse sample of students from 30 different colleges and universities across the United States (N = 9,625). Initial analyses suggested that a bifactor model was an adequate representation of the structure of the MEIM. This model was then used in subsequent invariance tests. Results suggested that the MEIM displayed configural and metric invariance across 5 diverse ethnic groups (i.e., White, Black, Hispanic, East Asian, and South Asian). There were indications that the MEIM displayed a similar factor structure with roughly equivalent factor loadings across diverse ethnic groups. However, there was little evidence of scalar invariance across these groups, suggesting that mean-level comparisons of MEIM scores across ethnic groups should be interpreted with caution. The implications of these findings for the interpretation and use of this popular measure of ethnic identity are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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10. Sensation seeking and danger invulnerability: Paths to college student risk-taking
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Ravert, Russell D., Schwartz, Seth J., Zamboanga, Byron L., Kim, Su Yeong, Weisskirch, Robert S., and Bersamin, Melina
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SENSATION seeking , *PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *RISK-taking behavior , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *PERSONALITY , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *PEERS , *DRUG abuse , *REGRESSION analysis , *DRUNK driving - Abstract
Abstract: This study examines the roles of sensation seeking and invulnerability as predictors of health compromising behaviors in a multiethnic sample of 1690 emerging adult college students (mean age=19.8, range 18–25 years) from nine US colleges and universities. Participants completed the Arnett Sensation Seeking Inventory and the Adolescent Invulnerability Scale; and reported how often they had participated in a set of health compromising risk behaviors (i.e., substance use, impaired driving, and sexual behaviors) in the 30 days prior to assessment. Sensation seeking and danger invulnerability scores were moderately correlated (r =.30). Findings from a series of multivariate Poisson regression analyses suggest that when considered simultaneously as predictors, sensation seeking appears to be a general risk factor associated with engagement in a variety of risk behaviors, whereas danger invulnerability is primarily a factor in those risk behaviors that are less common among peers (e.g., hard drug use, casual sex, and driving while intoxicated). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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11. Factor structure and factorial invariance of the Multidimensional Acculturative Stress Inventory.
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Castillo LG, Cano MA, Yoon M, Jung E, Brown EJ, Zamboanga BL, Kim SY, Schwartz SJ, Huynh QL, Weisskirch RS, and Whitbourne SK
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- Adolescent, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Stress, Psychological psychology, United States, Young Adult, Acculturation, Asian psychology, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Stress, Psychological diagnosis, Students psychology
- Abstract
Using a national data set, this study examined the factor structure and factorial invariance of the Multidimensional Acculturative Stress Inventory (MASI) across Latino and Asian Americans, gender, and nativity (U.S.- vs. foreign-born). Results showed that a 4-factor model of acculturative stress provided good fit to the data. Tests of factorial invariance provided evidence of measurement equivalence across all of the groupings tested. These findings suggest that the MASI operationalizes acculturative stress in an equivalent manner across Latino and Asian American students, gender, and nativity., ((c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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12. Risky business: Is there an association between casual sex and mental health among emerging adults?
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Bersamin MM, Zamboanga BL, Schwartz SJ, Donnellan MB, Hudson M, Weisskirch RS, Kim SY, Agocha VB, Whitbourne SK, and Caraway SJ
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- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Students statistics & numerical data, United States epidemiology, Unsafe Sex statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Mental Health statistics & numerical data, Risk-Taking, Sexual Partners psychology, Social Identification, Students psychology, Unsafe Sex psychology
- Abstract
A multiethnic sample of single, heterosexual, emerging-adult college students (N = 3,907) ages 18 to 25, from 30 institutions across the United States, participated in a study about identity, culture, psychological well-being, and risky behaviors. Given ongoing debates about the connection between casual sex and psychological adjustment, in the current study we assessed the cross-sectional association of participation in casual sex with psychological well-being and distress. A greater proportion of men (18.6%) compared to women (7.4%) reported having had casual sex in the month prior to assessment. Structural equation modeling indicated that casual sex was negatively associated with well-being (ß = .20, p < .001) and positively associated with psychological distress (ß = .16, p < .001). Gender did not moderate these associations. For emerging-adult college students, engaging in casual sex may elevate risk for negative psychological outcomes.
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- 2014
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13. An introduction to the composition of the Multi-Site University Study of Identity and Culture (MUSIC): a collaborative approach to research and mentorship.
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Weisskirch RS, Zamboanga BL, Ravert RD, Whitbourne SK, Park IJ, Lee RM, and Schwartz SJ
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- Culture, Humans, Social Identification, United States, Universities, Cooperative Behavior, Faculty, Mentors, Research
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The Multi-Site University Study of Identity and Culture (MUSIC) is the product of a research collaboration among faculty members from 30 colleges and universities from across the United States. Using Katz and Martin's (1997, p. 7) definition, the MUSIC research collaboration is "the working together of researchers to achieve the common goals of producing new scientific knowledge." The collaboration involved more than just coauthorship; it served "as a strategy to insert more energy, optimism, creativity and hope into the work of [researchers]" (Conoley & Conoley, 2010, p. 77). The philosophy underlying the MUSIC collaborative was intended to foster natural collaborations among researchers, to provide opportunities for scholarship and mentorship for early career and established researchers, and to support exploration of identity, cultural, and ethnic/racial research ideas by tapping the expertise and interests of the broad MUSIC network of collaborators. In this issue, five research articles present innovative findings from the MUSIC datasets. There are two themes across the articles. Research is emerging about broadening the constructs and measures of acculturation and ethnic identity and their relation to health risk behaviors and psychosocial and mental health outcomes. The second theme is about the relationship of perceived discrimination on behavioral and mental health outcomes among immigrant populations.
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- 2013
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14. Converging identities: dimensions of acculturation and personal identity status among immigrant college students.
- Author
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Schwartz SJ, Kim SY, Whitbourne SK, Zamboanga BL, Weisskirch RS, Forthun LF, Vazsonyi AT, Beyers W, and Luyckx K
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- Adult, Cluster Analysis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Culture, Emigrants and Immigrants statistics & numerical data, Ethnicity psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Self Concept, Students statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Universities, Young Adult, Acculturation, Emigrants and Immigrants psychology, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Social Identification, Students psychology
- Abstract
The present study was designed to ascertain the extent to which dimensions of acculturation would differ across personal identity statuses in a sample of 2,411 first- and second-generation, immigrant, college-attending emerging adults. Participants from 30 colleges and universities around the United States completed measures of personal identity processes, as well as of heritage and American cultural practices, values, and identifications. Cluster-analytic procedures were used to classify participants into personal identity statuses based on the personal identity processes. Results indicated that, across ethnic groups, individuals in the achieved and searching moratorium statuses reported the greatest endorsement of heritage and American cultural practices, values, and identifications; and individuals in the carefree diffusion status reported the lowest endorsement of all the cultural variables under study. These results are discussed in terms of the convergence between personal identity and cultural identity processes.
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- 2013
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15. Communalism, familism, and filial piety: are they birds of a collectivist feather?
- Author
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Schwartz SJ, Weisskirch RS, Hurley EA, Zamboanga BL, Park IJK, Kim SY, Umaña-Taylor A, Castillo LG, Brown E, and Greene AD
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- Adult, Family, Female, Humans, Individuality, Male, Social Support, Students, United States, Universities, Young Adult, Ethnicity psychology, Intergenerational Relations, Parent-Child Relations, Social Values
- Abstract
The present studies examined the extent to which (a) communalism, familism, and filial piety would pattern onto a single family/relationship primacy construct; (b) this construct would be closely related to indices of collectivism; and (c) this construct would be related to positive psychosocial functioning and psychological distress. In Study 1, 1,773 students from nine colleges and universities around the United States completed measures of communalism, familism, and filial piety, as well as of individualistic and collectivistic values. Results indicated that communalism, familism, and filial piety clustered onto a single factor. This factor, to which we refer as family/relationship primacy, was closely and positively related to collectivism but only weakly and positively related to individualism and independence. In Study 2, 10,491 students from 30 colleges and universities in 20 U.S. states completed measures of communalism, familism, and filial piety, as well as of positive psychosocial functioning and psychological distress. The family/relationship primacy factor again emerged and was positively associated with both positive psychosocial functioning and psychological distress. Clinical implications and future directions for the study of cultural values are discussed., (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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16. The relationships of personal and cultural identity to adaptive and maladaptive psychosocial functioning in emerging adults.
- Author
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Schwartz SJ, Zamboanga BL, Weisskirch RS, and Wang SC
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- Anxiety etiology, Anxiety psychology, Depression etiology, Depression psychology, Humans, Impulsive Behavior ethnology, Impulsive Behavior psychology, Individuality, Personality Inventory statistics & numerical data, Psychometrics, Social Adjustment, Students psychology, United States, Black or African American, Acculturation, Black People psychology, Ego, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Internal-External Control, Self Concept, Social Identification, White People psychology
- Abstract
The present study examined the extent to which cultural identity would be associated with adaptive and maladaptive psychosocial functioning, both directly and indirectly through a personal identity consolidation. A sample of 773 White, Black, and Hispanic university students completed measures of cultural identity, personal identity consolidation, adaptive psychosocial functioning, internalizing symptoms, and proclivity toward externalizing symptoms. Both heritage and American cultural identity were positively related to adaptive psychosocial functioning; American-culture identity was negatively associated with internalizing symptoms; and heritage-culture identity was negatively related to proclivity toward externalizing symptoms. All of these findings were mediated by personal identity consolidation and were fully consistent across ethnic groups. We discuss implications in terms of broadening the study of identity to include both personal and cultural dimensions of self.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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