Adolescent coping in different Chinese family environments

P. Nicholas Hamid, Xiao Dong Yue, Chi Mei Leung

    Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 62 - Review of books or of software (or similar publications/items)peer-review

    24 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This study explored the relationship between family environment and adolescent coping in a Chinese sample. Four family types were identified with cluster analysis: (a) conflict-control, (b) structured, cohesive, expressive, and recreation-oriented, (c) structured, cohesive, and low conflict, and (d) unstructured and low control. Families with high cohesion, expressiveness, organization, low conflict, and low to medium level of control were associated with a more constructive coping style. Chinese adolescents tended to (a) mobilize personal resources, (b) seek help from social resources, and (c) adopt a philosophy of doing nothing as their major coping style when they had a positive perception of their family environment. This coping style was termed "fatalistic voluntarism." Finally, boys' coping behaviors were somewhat different from girls'. Girls tended to rely more on social support, whereas boys tended to avoid the problem or engage in blaming.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)111-130
    JournalAdolescence
    Volume38
    Issue number149
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2003

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