Family Violence Among Adolescents Less Likely When They Feel That They Matter
Main Category: Pediatrics / Children's HealthAlso Included In: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 19 Apr 2011 - 1:00 PDT
'Family Violence Among Adolescents Less Likely When They Feel That They Matter'
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Teens and adolescents who believe that they matter to their family - that is, they feel the make a difference in the family's daily doings - are significantly less likely to threaten or engage in family violence, according to a new study by Brown sociologist Gregory Elliott. The findings are published in the Journal of Family Issues.
A relatively new concept, "mattering" is the belief persons make a difference in the world around them. Mattering is composed of three facets - awareness, importance, and reliance. Do others know you exist? Do they invest time and resources in you? Do they look to you as a resource? Elliott asserts that mattering is the fundamental motivation in human beings. "Above all else, there's a need to matter," he says.
The data for this analysis comes from telephone interviews with a national sample of 2,004 adolescents, age 11-18, as part of the 2000 Youth Risk Behavior Survey. Controlling for age, gender, race, religiosity, and family socioeconomic structure and size, the findings reveal that failing to matter to one's family increases the probability of violence, whereas a strong feeling of mattering is likely to protect the adolescent from engaging in violent behavior toward a family member.
Among the findings:
- Girls hit family members more than boys do.
- Compared to the average respondent, Hispanic youth are less likely than non-Hispanic whites to commit violence in the home.
- Children from larger families are more likely to use violence.
- If religion is important in one's life, the likelihood of family violence diminishes.
- Children whose parents did postgraduate study are more likely to enact violence than those whose parents did not finish high school.
"Mattering is the prime mover in a chain reaction involving self-esteem and attitudes toward violence," said Elliott. "If you don't matter, it sets up a chain of unfortunate feelings and events that makes it difficult to get along."
Elliott's co-authors are Melissa Colangelo of Brown University, Susan Cunningham of the College of the Holy Cross, and Richard Gelles of the University of Pennsylvania.
Source:
Deborah Baum
Brown University
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MLA
26 May. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/222757.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/222757.php.
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