Journal of Youth and Adolescence
Volume 44, Issue 9, 2015, Pages 1787-1802

Parental Influences on Adolescents’ Negative Attitudes Toward Immigrants (Article)

Gniewosz B.* , Noack P.
  • a Department for General Education and Empirical Educational Research, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Leopoldstr. 13, Munich, 80802, Germany
  • b Department of Educational Psychology, Friedrich-Schiller-University, Jena, Humboldtstraße 27, Jena, 07743, Germany

Abstract

Attitudes toward immigrants are a core component of adolescents’ social identities. Although in a globalized world positive attitudes are functional, negative views toward immigrant are widespread. This study investigates the parent-adolescent transmission of attitudes toward immigrants between age 12 and 16. In a longitudinal five-wave cohort-sequential multi-informant survey study on German adolescents (N = 1289; 52.9 % female) and their parents (mothers N = 772; fathers N = 654), self-reported attitudes toward immigrants were measured at each time point. Changes in the adolescents’ attitudes were predicted by maternal and paternal self-reported attitudes across time. Predictions of short-term changes revealed that the major effect of the parents’ attitudes takes place in early adolescence (between grade 6 and 7). The prediction of the adolescents’ long-term attitude changes indicates that these effects sustain until the age of 16. No between-parent differences were found. The results are discussed in terms of early adolescence being a sensitive period for parental effects on the development of adolescents’ attitudes toward immigrants. © 2015, Springer Science+Business Media New York.

Author Keywords

longitudinal Attitudes toward immigrants Adolescence Parental influence

Index Keywords

social exclusion longitudinal study Social Identification human Longitudinal Studies middle aged Cohort Studies Humans migrant psychology Adolescent male Emigrants and Immigrants female Parent-Child Relations Social Marginalization Adolescent Behavior adult Prejudice cohort analysis child parent relation attitude to health social behavior

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84938745120&doi=10.1007%2fs10964-015-0291-3&partnerID=40&md5=d7831d53366f1affd5aa4890cdf6abe7

DOI: 10.1007/s10964-015-0291-3
ISSN: 00472891
Cited by: 10
Original Language: English