Abstract
While the link between parenting and delinquency is well established, there is less consensus among scholars with regards
to the processes that account for this link. The current study had two objectives. The first was to disentangle the effects
of African American parents’ use of corporal punishment and verbal abuse on the conduct problems of their preteen children.
The second was to investigate the mechanisms that explain this relationship, such as having low self-control or a hostile
view of relationships, whereby these harsh parenting practices increase a youth’s involvement in problem behavior. Further,
we are interested in specifically addressing how these mechanisms may operate differently for males versus females. Analyses
utilized structural equation modeling and longitudinal data spanning approximately 2.5 years from a sample of 704 (54.2 %
female) African American children ages 10–12. The results indicated that verbal abuse was a more important predictor of conduct
problems than corporal punishment. Additionally, we found that the mechanisms that mediated the impact of verbal abuse and
corporal punishment on conduct problems varied by gender. For males, most of the effect of verbal abuse was mediated by low
self-control, whereas anger/frustration was the primary mediator for females. Implications of these results and directions
for future study are also discussed.
to the processes that account for this link. The current study had two objectives. The first was to disentangle the effects
of African American parents’ use of corporal punishment and verbal abuse on the conduct problems of their preteen children.
The second was to investigate the mechanisms that explain this relationship, such as having low self-control or a hostile
view of relationships, whereby these harsh parenting practices increase a youth’s involvement in problem behavior. Further,
we are interested in specifically addressing how these mechanisms may operate differently for males versus females. Analyses
utilized structural equation modeling and longitudinal data spanning approximately 2.5 years from a sample of 704 (54.2 %
female) African American children ages 10–12. The results indicated that verbal abuse was a more important predictor of conduct
problems than corporal punishment. Additionally, we found that the mechanisms that mediated the impact of verbal abuse and
corporal punishment on conduct problems varied by gender. For males, most of the effect of verbal abuse was mediated by low
self-control, whereas anger/frustration was the primary mediator for females. Implications of these results and directions
for future study are also discussed.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Empirical Research
- Pages 1-16
- DOI 10.1007/s10964-012-9755-x
- Authors
- Sara Z. Evans, Department of Justice Studies, University of West Florida, Pensacola, FL 32514, USA
- Leslie Gordon Simons, Department of Child and Family Development, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA
- Ronald L. Simons, Department of Sociology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA
- Journal Journal of Youth and Adolescence
- Online ISSN 1573-6601
- Print ISSN 0047-2891