Racial Identification as a Protective Factor for At-Risk Parenting in Black Parents: A Longitudinal, Multi-Method Investigation.

IF 4.5 2区 社会学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES Child Maltreatment Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-04 DOI:10.1177/10775595231159661
Anjali Gowda Ferguson, Christina M Rodriguez, Esther M Leerkes
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Abstract

Although considerable literature focuses on risk factors predicting parents' likelihood to engage in maltreatment, relatively less work evaluates potentially protective parental resources, particularly culturally relevant qualities. The current investigation utilized a multi-method longitudinal study to examine parents' racial identification as a possible resource, hypothesizing that Black parents with stronger racial group identification would demonstrate lower at-risk parenting, operationalized as lower child abuse risk and less negative observed parenting. In a sample of 359 mothers and fathers (half self-identified Black, half non-Hispanic White), controlling for socioeconomic status, findings partially supported the hypothesis. Black parents' greater racial identification was associated with lower child abuse risk and less observed negative parenting, whereas the reverse was true for White parents. The potential limitations of current assessment approaches to gauge at-risk parenting in parents of color are discussed, as well as how racial identification could be considered in culturally informed prevention programming for at-risk parenting.

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种族认同是黑人父母危险育儿的保护因素:一项纵向、多方法调查。
尽管大量文献关注的是预测父母遭受虐待可能性的风险因素,但评估潜在保护性父母资源,特别是文化相关素质的工作相对较少。目前的调查利用了一项多方法纵向研究,将父母的种族认同作为一种可能的资源,假设具有更强种族群体认同的黑人父母将表现出更低的育儿风险,表现为更低的虐待儿童风险和更少的负面观察到的育儿。在控制社会经济地位的359名母亲和父亲(一半是黑人,一半是非西班牙裔白人)的样本中,研究结果部分支持了这一假设。黑人父母的种族认同度越高,虐待儿童的风险越低,观察到的负面育儿方式越少,而白人父母的情况恰恰相反。讨论了当前评估有色人种父母风险养育方式的潜在局限性,以及如何在文化知情的风险养育预防方案中考虑种族认同。
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来源期刊
Child Maltreatment
Child Maltreatment Multiple-
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
7.80%
发文量
66
期刊介绍: Child Maltreatment is the official journal of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC), the nation"s largest interdisciplinary child maltreatment professional organization. Child Maltreatment"s object is to foster professional excellence in the field of child abuse and neglect by reporting current and at-issue scientific information and technical innovations in a form immediately useful to practitioners and researchers from mental health, child protection, law, law enforcement, medicine, nursing, and allied disciplines. Child Maltreatment emphasizes perspectives with a rigorous scientific base that are relevant to policy, practice, and research.
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