Parental Influence on Friendships Between Native and Immigrant Adolescents
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Publication date
2015-09
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taverne
Abstract
Parental influence on friendships between native (N = 5,683) and immigrant (N = 3,371) adolescents (aged ± 15) was investigated with the CILS4EU data of pupils in German and Dutch school classes (N = 446) and parents. The researchers examined whether parents affect friendships across group boundaries by shaping the structural opportunities to establish out-group friends and their children's out-group attitudes. The results show that if parents have more out-group friends and if they consider it less important to maintain in-group traditions, their children have more out-group friends. Part of this relationship is mediated by children's out-group attitudes. Some evidence is found that the opportunity structure mediates the relationship between parental characteristics and adolescent out-group friendship.
Keywords
Taverne, Social Sciences (miscellaneous), Developmental and Educational Psychology, Behavioral Neuroscience, Cultural Studies
Citation
Smith, S, Maas, I & van Tubergen, F 2015, 'Parental Influence on Friendships Between Native and Immigrant Adolescents', Journal of Research on Adolescence, vol. 25, no. 3, pp. 580-591. https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12149