Title of article
SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES IN ACCULTURATION AMONG MOTHERS, FATHERS, AND CHILDREN IN IMMIGRANT CHINESE FAMILIES
Author/Authors
CATHERINE L. COSTIGAN DAPHNE P. DOKIS، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
19
From page
723
To page
741
Abstract
Similarities and differences in acculturation in multiple domains were evaluated among mothers, fathers,
and children in 88 immigrant Chinese families in Canada. Parents and children differed most in host culture
domains (public Canadian behaviors and private Canadian values) and were most similar in ethnic
private domains (Chinese identity and values). Differences in the ethnic public domain (Chinese behaviors)
were moderate. Unexpectedly, considerable mother-father differences were also evident across
domains. The predictors of parent-child differences varied by domain. Differences in public domains were
larger in mother-child dyads and in families with longer residence in Canada. Differences in ethnic
private domains were larger in father-child dyads and in families characterized by less warmth. Findings
are discussed in terms of the domain specificity of cultural transmission and the influence of immigrant
parents in host versus ethnic dimensions.
Keywords
Acculturation , parent-child relationships , immigration , Chinese families
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708952
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