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      Culture’s Influence on Stressors, Parental Socialization, and Developmental Processes in the Mental Health of Children of Immigrants

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          Abstract

          Children of immigrants represent one in four children in the United States and will represent one in three children by 2050. Children of Asian and Latino immigrants together represent the majority of children of immigrants in the United States. Children of immigrants may be immigrants themselves, or they may have been born in the United States to foreign-born parents; their status may be legal or undocumented. We review transcultural and culture-specific factors that influence the various ways in which stressors are experienced; we also discuss the ways in which parental socialization and developmental processes function as risk factors or protective factors in their influence on the mental health of children of immigrants. Children of immigrants with elevated risk for mental health problems are more likely to be undocumented immigrants, refugees, or unaccompanied minors. We describe interventions and policies that show promise for reducing mental health problems among children of immigrants in the United States.

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          Most cited references104

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          The lasting impact of childhood health and circumstance.

          We quantify the lasting effects of childhood health and economic circumstances on adult health, employment and socioeconomic status, using data from a birth cohort that has been followed from birth into middle age. Controlling for parental income, education and social class, children who experience poor health have significantly lower educational attainment, poorer health, and lower social status as adults. Childhood health and circumstance appear to operate both through their impact on initial adult health and economic status, and through a continuing direct effect of prenatal and childhood health in middle age. Overall, our findings suggest more attention be paid to health as a potential mechanism through which intergenerational transmission of economic status takes place: cohort members born into poorer families experienced poorer childhood health, lower investments in human capital and poorer health in early adulthood, all of which are associated with lower earnings in middle age-the years in which they themselves become parents.
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            Bilingualism is not a categorical variable: Interaction between language proficiency and usage.

            Bilingual experience is dynamic and poses a challenge for researchers to develop instruments that capture its relevant dimensions. The present study examined responses from a questionnaire administered to 110 heterogeneous bilingual young adults. These questions concern participants' language use, acquisition history and self-reported proficiency. The questionnaire responses and performances on standardized English proficiency measures were analyzed using factor analysis. In order to retain a realistic representation of bilingual experience, the factors were allowed to correlate with each other in the analysis. Two correlating factors were extracted, representing daily bilingual usage and English proficiency. These two factors were also related to self-rated proficiency in English and non-English language. Results were interpreted as supporting the notion that bilingual experience is composed of multiple related dimensions that will need to be considered in assessments of the consequences of bilingualism.
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              Ethnic and Racial Identity During Adolescence and Into Young Adulthood: An Integrated Conceptualization

              Although ethnic and racial identity (ERI) are central to the normative development of youth of color, there have been few efforts to bring scholars together to discuss the theoretical complexities of these constructs and provide a synthesis of existing work. The Ethnic and Racial Identity in the 21st Century Study Group was assembled for this purpose. This article provides an overview of the interface of ERI with developmental and contextual issues across development, with an emphasis on adolescence and young adulthood. It proposes a metaconstruct to capture experiences that reflect both individuals' ethnic background and their racialized experiences in a specific sociohistorical context. Finally, it presents milestones in the development of ERI across developmental periods.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101235325
                33704
                Annu Rev Clin Psychol
                Annu Rev Clin Psychol
                Annual review of clinical psychology
                1548-5943
                1548-5951
                20 June 2019
                24 January 2018
                07 May 2018
                23 June 2019
                : 14
                : 343-370
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78712, USA
                [2 ]Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Miami, Miami, Florida 33136, USA
                [3 ]Department of Social Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA
                [4 ]Inclusive Education Group, College of Human Sciences, University of Potsdam, 14476 Potsdam, Germany
                Author notes
                Article
                PMC6589340 PMC6589340 6589340 nihpa1036887
                10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-050817-084925
                6589340
                29401046
                5ffe2466-e153-4da6-8536-09a14bb9629c
                History
                Categories
                Article

                stressors,parental socialization,culture specific,mental health,transcultural,children of immigrants

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