Peer Acceptance Protects Global Self-esteem from Negative Effects of Low Closeness to Parents During Adolescence and Early Adulthood

被引:0
|
作者
Marianne Skogbrott Birkeland
Kyrre Breivik
Bente Wold
机构
[1] University of Bergen,Department of Health Promotion and Development, The Faculty of Psychology
[2] Uni Health,Regional Centre for Child and Youth Mental Health and Child Welfare
[3] Uni Research,undefined
来源
Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2014年 / 43卷
关键词
Longitudinal; Measurement invariance; Parent relationships; Peer relationships; Self-esteem; Self-worth;
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摘要
Having a distant relationship with parents seems to increase the risk of developing a more negative global self-esteem. This article describes a longitudinal study of 1,090 Norwegian adolescents from the age of 13–23 (54 % males) that explored whether peer acceptance can act as a moderator and protect global self-esteem against the negative effects of experiencing low closeness in relationships with parents. A quadratic latent growth curve for global self-esteem with closeness to parents and peer acceptance as time-varying covariates was modeled, taking partial measurement invariance in global self-esteem into account. Peer acceptance was found to have a general protective effect on global self-esteem for all adolescents. In addition, at most ages, peer acceptance was found to have a protective-stabilizing effect on the relationship between closeness to parents and global self-esteem. This indicates that peer acceptance can be an especially valuable source of global self-esteem when closeness to parents is low.
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页码:70 / 80
页数:10
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