2003
DOI: 10.1300/j002v35n03_07
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A Multi-National Study of Interparental Conflict, Parenting, and Adolescent Functioning

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Cited by 90 publications
(75 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
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“…Third, and relatedly, if coercive parent-child interactions 11 MANUSCRIPT ACCEPTED FOR PUBLICATION IN JAACAP (VERSION 4 MAY 2016) 4 are at the core of the development of disruptive child behavior across countries, similar techniques for breaking these cycles may work equally well across countries. 7,[12][13][14] An alternative approach to importing parenting interventions is to develop interventions locally, based on the same underlying theory as established interventions. This has the advantage of specifically designing interventions to fit the needs of families within a certain country.…”
Section: Transported and Homegrown Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, and relatedly, if coercive parent-child interactions 11 MANUSCRIPT ACCEPTED FOR PUBLICATION IN JAACAP (VERSION 4 MAY 2016) 4 are at the core of the development of disruptive child behavior across countries, similar techniques for breaking these cycles may work equally well across countries. 7,[12][13][14] An alternative approach to importing parenting interventions is to develop interventions locally, based on the same underlying theory as established interventions. This has the advantage of specifically designing interventions to fit the needs of families within a certain country.…”
Section: Transported and Homegrown Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, some studies suggest that parenting, and indeed intervention effects, are more similar than different across cultures and countries (e.g., Albert, Trommsdorff, & Mishra, 2007;Bradford et al, 2003;Pinderhughes, Hurley, & The Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group, 2008;Reid et al, 2001). Moreover, the evidence from trials and systematic reviews is equivocal concerning the effectiveness of culturally adapted versions of interventions compared to those that have not been adapted (Barrera, Castro, & Steiker, 2011;Gottfredson et al, 2006;Huey & Polo, 2008;Wilson & Miller, 2003).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jordan, & Mercer, 2012), including depression (Barber, 1996;Mandara & Pikes, 2008;Plunkett et al, 2007;Soenens, Luyckz, Vansteenkiste, Duriez, & Goossens, 2008), anxiety (Drake & Ginsburg, 2012), academic achievement (Barber & Harmon, 2002), delinquency (Bradford, Barber, Olsen, Erickson, Ward, & Stolz, 2004), and aggression (Murray, Dwyer, Rubin, Knighton-Wisor, & Booth-LaForce, 2013). Considering the feelings of guilt, self-responsibility, dependency, low self-esteem, and depressed affect that often characterize the experience of psychological control (Barber, 1996), researchers have largely explored its relation to anxiety and depression.…”
Section: Psychological Controlmentioning
confidence: 99%