TY - JOUR
T1 - Neighborhood structural characteristics and Mexican-origin adolescents' development
AU - White, Rebecca M.B.
AU - Zeiders, Katharine H.
AU - Safa, M. Dalal
N1 - Funding Information:
Causadias José M. Cicchetti Dante Editors White Rebecca M. B. a Zeiders Katharine H. b Safa M. Dalal a a Arizona State University b University of Arizona Funding was provided by NIMH Grant R01-MH68920, the William T. Grant Foundation Scholars Program Grant ID 182878, and the Latino Resilience Enterprise, T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics. The authors are thankful for the support of Mark Roosa, Nancy Gonzales, George Knight, Jenn-Yun Tein, Marisela Torres, Leticia Gelhard, Jaimee Virgo, Alexandria Curlee, our Community Advisory Board and interviewers, and the families who participated in the study. The first and second authors gratefully acknowledge writing support from the Frances McClelland Institute for Children, Youth, & Families’ Latino Families Consortium Writing Retreat. Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Rebecca M. B. White, P. O. Box 873701 , T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics , Arizona State University , Tempe, AZ 85287-3701 ; E-mail: rebecca.white@asu.edu . 05 10 2018 12 2018 30 5
Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright Cambridge University Press 2018.
PY - 2018/12/1
Y1 - 2018/12/1
N2 - Ethnic-racial and socioeconomic residential segregation are endemic in the United States, representing societal-level sociocultural processes that likely shape development. Considered alongside communities' abilities to respond to external forces, like stratification, in ways that promote youth adaptive functioning and mitigate maladaptive functioning, it is likely that residence in segregated neighborhoods during adolescence has both costs and benefits. We examined the influences that early adolescents' neighborhood structural characteristics, including Latino concentration and concentrated poverty, had on a range of developmentally salient downstream outcomes (i.e., internalizing, externalizing, prosocial behaviors, and ethnic-racial identity resolution) via implications for intermediate aspects of adolescents' community participation and engagement (i.e., ethnic-racial identity exploration, ethnic-racial discrimination from peers, and school attachment). These mediational mechanisms were tested prospectively across three waves (Mage w1-w3 = 12.79, 15.83, 17.37 years, respectively) in a sample of 733 Mexican-origin adolescents (48.8% female). We found higher neighborhood Latino concentration during early adolescence predicted greater school attachment and ethnic-racial identity exploration and lower discrimination from peers in middle adolescence. These benefits, in turn, were associated with lower externalizing and internalizing and higher ethnic-racial identity resolution and prosocial behaviors in late adolescence. Findings are discussed relative to major guidelines for integrating culture into development and psychopathology.
AB - Ethnic-racial and socioeconomic residential segregation are endemic in the United States, representing societal-level sociocultural processes that likely shape development. Considered alongside communities' abilities to respond to external forces, like stratification, in ways that promote youth adaptive functioning and mitigate maladaptive functioning, it is likely that residence in segregated neighborhoods during adolescence has both costs and benefits. We examined the influences that early adolescents' neighborhood structural characteristics, including Latino concentration and concentrated poverty, had on a range of developmentally salient downstream outcomes (i.e., internalizing, externalizing, prosocial behaviors, and ethnic-racial identity resolution) via implications for intermediate aspects of adolescents' community participation and engagement (i.e., ethnic-racial identity exploration, ethnic-racial discrimination from peers, and school attachment). These mediational mechanisms were tested prospectively across three waves (Mage w1-w3 = 12.79, 15.83, 17.37 years, respectively) in a sample of 733 Mexican-origin adolescents (48.8% female). We found higher neighborhood Latino concentration during early adolescence predicted greater school attachment and ethnic-racial identity exploration and lower discrimination from peers in middle adolescence. These benefits, in turn, were associated with lower externalizing and internalizing and higher ethnic-racial identity resolution and prosocial behaviors in late adolescence. Findings are discussed relative to major guidelines for integrating culture into development and psychopathology.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0954579418001177
DO - 10.1017/S0954579418001177
M3 - Article
C2 - 30289093
AN - SCOPUS:85054990169
SN - 0954-5794
VL - 30
SP - 1679
EP - 1698
JO - Development and Psychopathology
JF - Development and Psychopathology
IS - 5
ER -