TY - JOUR
T1 - The Association Between Child Maltreatment and Family Structures
T2 - Evidence from Children in Rural China
AU - Wan, Guowei
AU - Pei, Tinghao
AU - He, Xinyu
AU - Zhang, Baixi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2023/1
Y1 - 2023/1
N2 - Few studies have discussed the association between child maltreatment and family structure in developing countries, and this study aims to investigate this association. Data were derived from a survey of 4,180 children (Mage = 12.09, 48.44% were boys) conducted in rural China from June to December 2019. This study reaches two significant conclusions. First, the risk of child maltreatment under different family structures varied significantly. The statistical results show that the prevalence and severity of maltreatment were lowest for intact families, followed by levels for multigenerational and single-parent families, while the risk for grandparent-headed and other families was the highest. Second, the factors associated with child maltreatment differed by family structure. In intact, single-parent and multigenerational families, male caregiver variables had a strong correlation with maltreated behaviors, while female caregiver variables were highly related to maltreatment in grandparent-headed and other families. This study highlights that China’s rural children living in nonintact families are at a greater risk of experiencing child maltreatment, showing that defects in the residual child welfare system may magnify the dysfunction of fragile families.
AB - Few studies have discussed the association between child maltreatment and family structure in developing countries, and this study aims to investigate this association. Data were derived from a survey of 4,180 children (Mage = 12.09, 48.44% were boys) conducted in rural China from June to December 2019. This study reaches two significant conclusions. First, the risk of child maltreatment under different family structures varied significantly. The statistical results show that the prevalence and severity of maltreatment were lowest for intact families, followed by levels for multigenerational and single-parent families, while the risk for grandparent-headed and other families was the highest. Second, the factors associated with child maltreatment differed by family structure. In intact, single-parent and multigenerational families, male caregiver variables had a strong correlation with maltreated behaviors, while female caregiver variables were highly related to maltreatment in grandparent-headed and other families. This study highlights that China’s rural children living in nonintact families are at a greater risk of experiencing child maltreatment, showing that defects in the residual child welfare system may magnify the dysfunction of fragile families.
KW - Child maltreatment
KW - Confucian culture
KW - Family structure
KW - Household dysfunction
KW - Residual child welfare system
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85122780999
U2 - 10.1007/s10896-022-00358-w
DO - 10.1007/s10896-022-00358-w
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85122780999
SN - 0885-7482
VL - 38
SP - 63
EP - 75
JO - Journal of Family Violence
JF - Journal of Family Violence
IS - 1
ER -