What’s so Bad About Competitive Coparenting? Family-Level Predictors of Children’s Externalizing Symptoms

被引:0
|
作者
Sarah E. Murphy
Deborah B. Jacobvitz
Nancy L. Hazen
机构
[1] The University of Texas at Austin,Department of Human Development and Family Sciences
来源
关键词
Competitive coparenting; Externalizing symptoms; Negative affectivity; Conflict; Family systems;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Competitive coparenting, defined as one parent undermining the other in the presence of the child or jockeying for control of the child, has been identified as a robust predictor of externalizing symptoms in children. But in addition to its core definition, competitive coparenting is also likely to involve a lack of cooperative coparenting, displays of negative affectivity, and family conflict, making it unclear what drives the relation between competitive coparenting and children’s externalizing symptoms. Thus, the present study aimed to examine the extent to which each aspect of family negativity contributes to externalizing symptoms in children, and in particular, whether the core definition of competitive coparenting (parental triangulation of the child) predicts their later externalizing symptoms above and beyond effects due to other types of negative family interaction. Both parents and their first-born child (N = 108 families) were observed in triadic family interactions when children were 24 months old, and children’s externalizing symptoms were rated by their teachers when children were 7 years old. Family interactions were coded at the triadic level for competitive coparenting, cooperative coparenting, negative affect, and conflict. First-order correlations indicated that competitive coparenting, negative affectivity, and family conflict within the triad were all associated with each other and with children’s externalizing symptoms. When all entered into a regression, however, competitive coparenting remained the sole predictor of later externalizing symptoms in children. Results suggest that the core definition of competitive coparenting predicts children’s externalizing symptoms beyond the general presence in family interaction of low cooperation, negative emotionality, and conflict.
引用
收藏
页码:1684 / 1690
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] What's so Bad About Competitive Coparenting? Family-Level Predictors of Children's Externalizing Symptoms
    Murphy, Sarah E.
    Jacobvitz, Deborah B.
    Hazen, Nancy L.
    JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES, 2016, 25 (05) : 1684 - 1690
  • [2] Family-Level Predictors of Australian Children's Dental Caries and Injuries
    Stormon, Nicole
    Ford, Pauline J.
    Lalloo, Ratilal
    PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY, 2020, 42 (01) : 28 - +
  • [3] What's so bad about books?
    Fialkoff, F
    LIBRARY JOURNAL, 2006, 131 (01) : 8 - 8
  • [4] What's so bad about misinformation?
    de Ridder, Jeroen
    INQUIRY-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY, 2021,
  • [5] What's so bad about fanaticism?
    Katsafanas, Paul
    SYNTHESE, 2024, 203 (06)
  • [6] What's so bad about scientism?
    Mizrahi, Moti
    SOCIAL EPISTEMOLOGY, 2017, 31 (04) : 351 - 367
  • [7] What's so Bad about Discrimination?
    Segall, Shlomi
    UTILITAS, 2012, 24 (01) : 82 - 100
  • [8] What's so bad about Delaware?
    Skeel, DA
    VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW, 2001, 54 (02) : 309 - 329
  • [9] Child- and family-level factors as predictors of Chinese children's generalized anxiety disorder symptoms in middle childhood
    Wang, Fang
    Wang, Meifang
    Wang, Xuesi
    Zhao, Jianshe
    CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 42 (29) : 25061 - 25074
  • [10] Child- and family-level factors as predictors of Chinese children’s generalized anxiety disorder symptoms in middle childhood
    Fang Wang
    Meifang Wang
    Xuesi Wang
    Jianshe Zhao
    Current Psychology, 2023, 42 : 25061 - 25074