Longitudinal Pathways Linking Racial Discrimination and Chinese American Mothers’ Parenting

Xiaoli Zong, Charissa S.L. Cheah*, Huiguang Ren, Craig H. Hart

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Racial discrimination is a salient and chronic stressor for ethnic minority parents that can negatively impact their parenting. The present study used a short-term longitudinal design to examine the link between Chinese American mothers’ stressful experiences of racial discrimination and their authoritarian parenting practices, the mediating role of mothers’ depressive symptoms, and the moderating role of their behavioral acculturation toward American and Chinese cultures in these associations (i.e., behavioral participation in the American culture and behavioral maintenance of Chinese culture). Participants were 143 first-generation Chinese American mothers (Mage = 38.0 years) with preschool-age children (Mage = 4.6 years; 50% girls). Mothers reported their racial discrimination stress, depressive symptoms, American and Chinese behavioral acculturation, and authoritarian parenting across two time points over a 6-month interval. A moderated mediation model was conducted using structural equation modeling to test the hypothesized associations. Chinese American mothers’ depressive symptoms mediated the association between racial discrimination stress and authoritarian parenting. The path between racial discrimination stress and depressive symptoms and the indirect effect of racial discrimination stress on authoritarian parenting were buffered by mothers’ behavioral acculturation toward American culture and exacerbated by their behavioral acculturation toward Chinese culture. This study provides the first longitudinal evidence linking Chinese American mothers’ experiences of racial discrimination and their negative parenting over time as well as mediating and moderating factors underlying this process. Our findings highlight the need for systemic efforts addressing racial inequalities and fostering positive development in Asian Americans and other marginalized families.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2119-2132
Number of pages14
JournalDevelopmental Psychology
Volume59
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Chinese American mothers
  • behavioral acculturation
  • depressive symptoms
  • parenting
  • racial discrimination

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