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Parental responsiveness and adolescent susceptibility to peer influence: A cross-cultural investigation

Title:

Parental responsiveness and adolescent susceptibility to peer influence: A cross-cultural investigation

Yang, Zhiyong and Laroche, Michel (2011) Parental responsiveness and adolescent susceptibility to peer influence: A cross-cultural investigation. Journal of Business Research, 64 (9). pp. 979-987. ISSN 01482963

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2010.11.021

Abstract

From a developmental perspective, this research focuses on how parental responsiveness affects adolescent susceptibility to peer influence both directly, and indirectly, through the key elements of adolescent self-concept (i.e., interdependent self-construal, self-esteem, and self-monitoring). The proposed parent-self-peer model incorporates culture as a moderator. The overarching finding is that in individualist cultures such as Canada, responsiveness reduces susceptibility mainly through an indirect effect by undermining interdependent self-construal, fostering self-esteem, and impairing self-monitoring. However, in collectivist cultures such as China, responsive parenting reduces susceptibility primarily through a direct effect. These findings are largely due to the cultural differences in socialization goals oriented toward individualism vs. collectivism.

Divisions:Concordia University > John Molson School of Business > Marketing
Item Type:Article
Refereed:Yes
Authors:Yang, Zhiyong and Laroche, Michel
Journal or Publication:Journal of Business Research
Date:2011
Digital Object Identifier (DOI):10.1016/j.jbusres.2010.11.021
Keywords:Parental responsiveness, susceptibility to peer influence, self-construal, self-esteem, self-monitoring, cross-cultural
ID Code:973646
Deposited By: ANDREA MURRAY
Deposited On:13 Mar 2012 15:13
Last Modified:18 Jan 2018 17:36
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