Dyadic coping, parental warmth, and adolescent externalizing behavior in four countries
Publication Date
2022Author
Ann T. Skinner , Sevtap Gurdal, Lei Chang, Paul Oburu, and Sombat Tapanya
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Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
This study examined parental warmth as a mediator of relations between
mothers’ and fathers’ perceptions of dyadic coping and adolescent
externalizing outcomes. Data from 472 adolescents, mothers, and fathers
were collected over a three-year period from families in China, Kenya,
Sweden, and Thailand. For mothers in all four sites and fathers in three sites,
better parental dyadic coping at youth age 13 years predicted higher levels of
parental warmth at youth age 14 years. For mothers in all four sites, higher
levels of maternal warmth were in turn related to less youth externalizing
behavior at the age of 15 years, and higher levels of dyadic coping at youth
age 13 years were related to less youth externalizing behavior at the age of
15 years indirectly through maternal warmth. Emotional Security Theory
helps explain the process by which dyadic coping is related to adolescent
externalizing behavior. The results have important implications for parentand family-based interventions
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- Department of Psychology [209]