Although we rarely hear about it, children sometimes aggress against their parents. This is a difficult topic to study because abused parents and abusive children are both reluctant to admit the occurrence of child-to-parent aggression. There are very few research studies on this topic, and even fewer theoretical explanations of why it occurs. We predicted that exposure to violence in the home (e.g., parents aggressing against each other) and ineffective parenting (i.e., parenting that is overly permissive or lacks warmth) influences cognitive schemas of how children perceive themselves and the world around them (i.e., whether aggression is normal, whether they develop grandiose self-views, and whether they feel disconnected and rejected), which, in turn, predicts child-to-parent aggression. In a 3-year longitudinal study of 591 adolescents and their parents, we found that exposure to violence in Year 1 predicted child-to-parent aggression in Year 3. In addition, parenting characterized by lack of warmth in Year 1 was related to narcissistic and entitled self-views and disconnection and rejection schemas in Year 2, which, in turn, predicted child-to-mother and child-to-father aggression in Year 3. Gender comparisons indicated that narcissism predicted child-to-parent aggression only in boys and that exposure to violence was a stronger predictor of child-to-father violence in boys. This longitudinal study increases our understanding of the understudied but important topic of child-to-parent aggression, and will hopefully stimulate future research.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0039092DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

child-to-parent aggression
24
longitudinal study
12
exposure violence
12
aggression
8
aggression 3-year
8
3-year longitudinal
8
predicted child-to-parent
8
aggression year
8
child-to-parent
5
year
5

Similar Publications

The reliability and validity of Child-to-parent Violence Questionnaire (CPV-Q) among Chinese adolescents.

Psicol Reflex Crit

August 2024

College of Education and Psychological Science, Hefei Normal University, 708, Xingzhi Building, No. 1688 Lianhua Road, Hefei, Anhui Province, China.

Objective: To test the reliability and validity of the Chinese version of the Child-to-parent Violence Questionnaire (CPV-Q) in a group of Chinese adolescents.

Methods: A total of 1138 adolescents (15.24 ± 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Child-to-parent violence and abuse (CPVA) is a pattern of behavior where a parent or carer is abused by a child they are caring for. The main body of work on CPVA is relatively recent and evolving at pace. This scoping review explores the characteristics of parents, carers, children, and young people in cases of CPVA, the characteristics of CPVA, and barriers to and facilitators of help-seeking in cases of CPVA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

[Not Available].

Prax Kinderpsychol Kinderpsychiatr

March 2024

Child-to-Parent Violence -The Blind Spot in Research on Family Violence? A Systematic Review Child-to-parent violence (CPV) is a phenomenon that has received little attention in the German scientific community. With this paper, the authors present the international state of research in the context of a systematic review. By means of a search a dataset of 317 scientific publications for the period 2012-2022 was identified at August 2022.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Association of Alcohol Use and Child-to-Parent Violence in Mexican Adolescents.

Subst Use Misuse

January 2024

Facultad de Enfermería Mochis, Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa, Los Mochis, Sinaloa, México.

Addictions can modify the dynamics, communication, and establishment of assertive relationships in the family nucleus, situations that can cause different types of family violence. A phenomenon of special interest is child-to-parent violence or children's violence toward their parents. This type of violence can be exercised physically (hitting, kicking, shoving), verbally (shouting, blackmailing and insulting) and economically (using a card, stealing money or belongings from the parents).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!