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Parent‐to‐Child Aggression Among Asian American Parents: Culture,Context, and Vulnerability
Authors:Anna S. Lau,David T. Takeuchi,Margarita Alegrí  a
Abstract:
We examined correlates of lifetime parent‐to‐child aggression in a representative sample of 1,293 Asian American parents. Correlates examined included nativity, indicators of acculturation, socioeconomic status, family climate, and stressors associated with minority status. Results revealed that Asian Americans of Chinese descent and those who immigrated as youth were more likely to report minor parental aggression; ethnicity and nativity were not associated with severe aggression. Indices of acculturation did not predict risk, but minority status stressors (perceived discrimination, low social standing) predicted risk of both minor and severe aggression. Affective climate differed markedly in families with minor versus severe aggression. Parental aggression in Asian American families may not be cultural per se, but stress associated with immigrant family context may heighten vulnerability.
Keywords:Asian Americans  child abuse  child discipline/guidance  family diversity  immigration/migrant families  parenting
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