2018
DOI: 10.1017/s0954579418001177
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Neighborhood structural characteristics and Mexican-origin adolescents’ development

Abstract: Ethnic–racial and socioeconomic residential segregation are endemic in the United States, representing societal-level sociocultural processes that likely shape development. Considered alongside communities’ abilities to respond to external forces, like stratification, in ways that promote youth adaptive functioning and mitigate maladaptive functioning, it is likely that residence in segregated neighborhoods during adolescence has both costs and benefits. We examined the influences that early adolescents’ neigh… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(44 citation statements)
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References 104 publications
(280 reference statements)
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“…Concomitant changes in discrimination and perceptions of school climate may negatively impact psychosocial and academic functioning for Latinx youth. Similarly, school attachment and ethnic-racial identity exploration in middle adolescence served to protect Mexican-origin youth from internalizing symptoms in late adolescence (White et al 2018), and these processes may be important sources of resilience. Further, recent work suggests that the relation between internalizing symptoms and discrimination across adolescence is bidirectional (Hou et al 2015), and more work should endeavor to examine how these processes relate across time, especially for depressive symptoms for which there was no evidence of timing effects.…”
Section: Peer Discrimination and Symptomatologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Concomitant changes in discrimination and perceptions of school climate may negatively impact psychosocial and academic functioning for Latinx youth. Similarly, school attachment and ethnic-racial identity exploration in middle adolescence served to protect Mexican-origin youth from internalizing symptoms in late adolescence (White et al 2018), and these processes may be important sources of resilience. Further, recent work suggests that the relation between internalizing symptoms and discrimination across adolescence is bidirectional (Hou et al 2015), and more work should endeavor to examine how these processes relate across time, especially for depressive symptoms for which there was no evidence of timing effects.…”
Section: Peer Discrimination and Symptomatologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…White, Zeiders, and Safa (2018) studied the role of racial residential segregation on the development of internalizing, externalizing, prosocial behaviors, and ethnic–racial identity resolution in a sample of 733 Mexican-origin adolescents assessed at three time points. Higher neighborhood Latino concentration during early adolescence predicted greater ethnic–racial identity exploration and lower discrimination from peers in middle adolescence.…”
Section: Equifinality and Multifinality In Cultural Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historically, higher neighborhood Latinx concentration has been operationalized as an indicator of neighborhood risk among samples of ethnically and racially diverse children (e.g., Lara-Cinisomo, Xue, & Brooks-Gunn, 2013;Xue, Leventhal, Brooks-Gunn, & Earls, 2005). Cultural developmental theory suggests that the costs or benefits of Latinx concentration for children's development may depend on individual race or ethnicity, such that higher neighborhood Latinx concentration may not be promotive of mental health for all children (Garc ıa Coll et al, 1996;White et al, 2018). Rather, aspects of living in neighborhood comprised of higher proportions of same-ethnic neighbors may be promotive for Mexican American families, highlighting the importance of within-group design and thoughtful operationalization of neighborhood Latinx concentration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%