Exposure to neighborhood violence and child-parent conflict among a longitudinal sample of Dutch adolescents

Publication date

2023-05

Authors

Nieuwenhuis, J.ISNI 0000000452547032
Best, Matt
Vogel, Matt
van Ham, Maarten
Branje, SusanORCID 0000-0002-9999-5313ISNI 0000000112866969
Meeus, WimISNI 0000000034127027

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

An extensive body of research has documented the deleterious effects of community violence on adolescent development and behavior. Much of this research focuses on how exposure to violence structures social interaction, and, ultimately, how it motivates youth to engage in troublesome behavior. This study builds upon this body of research to demonstrate how exposure to community violence strains relationships between adolescents and their caregivers, resulting in higher levels of interpersonal conflict. Drawing on five waves of longitudinal panel data (n = 778; observations = 3458; 55 % female), combined with police records of violent crime in Utrecht, the Netherlands, a hybrid tobit regression documents how exposure to local and nearby violence affects child-parent conflict. The results indicate that youth who experience high levels of neighborhood violence report higher levels of conflict with parents than youth with low exposure to neighborhood violence. These results are consistent across different levels of neighborhood aggregation.

Keywords

Neighborhoods, Parent-child relationships, Violence, Development, Sociology and Political Science, Urban Studies, Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management, SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Citation

Nieuwenhuis, J, Best, M, Vogel, M, van Ham, M, Branje, S & Meeus, W 2023, 'Exposure to neighborhood violence and child-parent conflict among a longitudinal sample of Dutch adolescents', Cities, vol. 136, 104258. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2023.104258