Journal of Social Psychology
Volume 145, Issue 4, 2005, Pages 405-428

Immigrant adolescents behaving as culture brokers: A study of families from the former soviet union (Article)

Jones C.J.* , Trickett E.J.
  • a University of Illinois, Chicago, United States
  • b University of Maryland, College Park, United States

Abstract

In immigrant families, culture brokering (CB) occurs when children mediate the new culture for their family. The authors examined CB in Russian immigrant adolescent-mother dyads (N = 226) to determine the types and amounts of CB that Russian adolescents performed, why adolescents assumed the CB role, and how the role affected adolescent and familial functioning. The present results indicated that most adolescents reported CB for their families (89%). Children of families that more recently arrived in the U.S., with mothers who were less American-language acculturated, culture brokered more. Higher levels of CB related to (a) higher adolescent stress and reports of problems at home and with friends and (b) lower feelings of school membership. Parent-reported problems at home did not relate to CB. The authors discussed implications for future research on the role of the child as culture broker. © 2005 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.

Author Keywords

immigrant families Family relations Adolescents Culture broker Parenting

Index Keywords

male Acculturation female USSR Emigration and Immigration Humans cultural factor ethnology Parent-Child Relations Article United States human adult child parent relation migration family Adolescent

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-23744505542&doi=10.3200%2fSOCP.145.4.405-428&partnerID=40&md5=209d1b9bd412474a5431c53ebc889130

DOI: 10.3200/SOCP.145.4.405-428
ISSN: 00224545
Cited by: 80
Original Language: English