Mind Your Own Business! Longitudinal Relations Between Perceived Privacy Invasion and Adolescent-Parent Conflict

Publication date

2009-08

Authors

Hawk, Skyler T.ISNI 0000000395033421
Keijsers, LoesISNI 0000000389315975
Hale, WilliamISNI 0000000396593746
Meeus, WimISNI 0000000034127027

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Article
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Abstract

Privacy coordination between adolescents and their parents is difficult, as adolescents' changing roles require adjustments to expectations about family boundaries. Adolescents' perceptions of privacy invasion likely provoke conflicts with parents, but higher levels of conflict may also foster invasion perceptions. This longitudinal study assessed relations between privacy invasion and conflict frequency among adolescents, mothers, and fathers (N = 309). Bidirectional relations were present; all reports showed that invasion provoked conflict in later adolescence, but the timing and direction of conflict-to-invasion relations differed between respondents and measurement waves. The findings suggest a functional role for conflict in adolescent-parent privacy negotiations, in that it both draws attention to discrepant expectations and provides youths with a means of directly managing perceived boundary violations.

Keywords

privacy invasion, adolescent-parent conflict, Communication Privacy Management, Expectancy Violation-Realignment, family communication, CHILDRENS ATTRIBUTIONS, BULIMIA-NERVOSA, FAMILY, FATHERS, ASSOCIATIONS, PERSPECTIVES, KNOWLEDGE, BEHAVIOR, AUTONOMY, MOTHERS, Taverne

Citation

Hawk, S T, Keijsers, L, Hale, W W & Meeus, W 2009, 'Mind Your Own Business! Longitudinal Relations Between Perceived Privacy Invasion and Adolescent-Parent Conflict', Journal of Family Psychology, vol. 23, no. 4, pp. 511-520. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0015426