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White, Rebecca M. B.; Roosa, Mark W. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
The family stress model posits that contextual stressors, such as neighborhood danger, negatively influence youth adjustment, including internalizing symptoms, via disruptions in parenting and family processes. The current study examined a culturally and contextually modified family stress model in a diverse sample of Mexican-origin fathers and…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Neighborhoods, Mexican Americans, Child Rearing
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Roosa, Mark W.; Burrell, Ginger L.; Nair, Rajni L.; Coxe, Stefany; Tein, Jenn-Yun; Knight, George P. – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2010
This study examined a stress process model in which stressful life events and association with delinquent peers mediated the relationship of neighborhood disadvantage to Mexican American early adolescents' mental health. The authors also proposed that child gender, child generation, and neighborhood informal social control would moderate the…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Mexican Americans, Social Control, Early Adolescents
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Kim, Su Yeong; Nair, Rajni; Knight, George P.; Roosa, Mark W.; Updegraff, Kimberly A. – Journal of Community Psychology, 2009
The factorial and construct equivalence of subscales assessing parents' and children's perceptions of the quality of their neighborhood was examined in Mexican American and European American families. All subscales (dangerous people in the neighborhood, sense of safety in the neighborhood, quality of the physical environment) demonstrated adequate…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Mexican Americans, Physical Environment, Hispanic Americans
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White, Rebecca M. B.; Roosa, Mark W.; Weaver, Scott R.; Nair, Rajni L. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2009
Family stress theory can explain associations between contextual stressors and parenting. The theory, however, has not been tested among Mexican Americans or expanded to include cultural-contextual risks. This study examined associations between neighborhood, economic, and acculturative stressors and parenting behaviors in a sample of 570…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Mexican Americans, Child Rearing, Depression (Psychology)
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Roosa, Mark W.; White, Rebecca M. B.; Zeiders, Katharine H.; Tein, Jenn-Yun – Journal of Community Psychology, 2009
Accumulating research demonstrates that both archival indicators and residents' self-reports of neighborhood conditions are useful predictors of a variety of physical health, mental health, substance use, criminal, and educational outcomes. Although studies have shown these two types of measures are often related, no research has systematically…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Social Indicators, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Comparative Analysis
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Deng, Shiying; Lopez, Vera; Roosa, Mark W.; Ryu, Ehri; Burrell, Ginger Lockhart; Tein, Jenn-Yun; Crowder, Sakina – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2006
The objective of the current study was to examine the relationships among neighborhood disadvantage, perceived neighborhood quality, family processes, and child internalizing problems within the framework of social disorganization theory. The sample consisted of 189 low-income, European American and Mexican American children and their mothers. The…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Neighborhoods, Mothers, Mexican Americans
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Roosa, Mark W.; Deng, Shiying; Ryu, Ehri; Lockhart Burrell, Ginger; Tein, Jenn-Yun; Jones, Sarah; Lopez, Vera; Crowder, Sakina – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
Neighborhood conditions are related to children's externalizing behavior, although few processes that help explain this association have been identified. With data from 189 primarily low-income Anglo and Mexican American families, we tested a stress process model that included 3 potential mediators of this relationship. The results showed that…
Descriptors: Income, Mexican Americans, Depression (Psychology), Neighborhoods