1. Comparative conflict resolution patterns among parent-teen dyads of four ethnic groups in Hawaii.
- Author
-
Hartz DT
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aggression psychology, Asian psychology, Child Abuse psychology, Domestic Violence psychology, Europe ethnology, Female, Gender Identity, Hawaii, Humans, Japan ethnology, Male, Personality Inventory, Philippines ethnology, Polynesia ethnology, Risk Factors, Child Abuse ethnology, Conflict, Psychological, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Domestic Violence ethnology, Ethnicity psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Problem Solving
- Abstract
Ninety-six high school students reported their own behavior and the behavior of their parents in the resolution of conflicts during the previous year, using the Conflict Tactics Scale (Straus, 1979). Parent-teen dyadic aggression levels for Americans of European, Japanese, Polynesian, and Filipino ancestry were compared in a series of orthogonal contrasts. The adolescent children of Polynesian American parents reported significantly higher parent aggression levels than did adolescents with parents of other ethnicity. Parent aggression was the best predictor of teen aggression directed toward parents. Subjects reciprocated with counteraggression toward European American parents significantly more often than toward parents of other ethnicity. Aggression by one parent was highly correlated with aggression by the other parent. Aggression by either parent was more highly correlated with teen aggression toward the mother, than with teen aggression toward the father.
- Published
- 1995
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