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Open AccessJournal Article

¿Hasta qué punto la violencia filio-parental es bidireccional?

Izaskun Ibabe, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2011 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 2, pp 265-277
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors explored gender differences in victims and perpetrators of child-to-parent violence and the importance of intra-family violence in the development of this type of violent behavior.
Abstract
Title: To what extent is child-to-parent violence bi-directional?. Abstract: Child-to-parent violence is a family problem that has remained obscured for decades. The main purpose of this study was to explore gender differences in victims and perpetrators of child-to-parent violence. The importance of intra-family violence in the development of this type of violent behavior was also studied. The sample comprised 485 adolescents from the province of Gipuzkoa (Spain), of both sexes, taken from 9 schools and aged 12 to 18. As found in many previous studies, sons were more likely to be perpetrators of physical abuse than daughters. Although mothers suffered more psychological and emotional abuse than fathers, there were no differences between mothers and fathers with regard to physical abuse from their children. The hypothesis of the bi-directionality of violence was confirmed for physical violence in the male group that battered their parents. Similarly, marital violence (violence between par- ents) was a predictor of the three types of child-to-parent abusive behav- iours (physical, psychological and emotional) for the male group. Moreo- ver, we found three psychological variables in adolescents (drug abuse, self-esteem and anxiety) that emerged as predictors of child-to-parent

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Citations
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Child-to-parent violence: the role of exposure to violence and its relationship to social-cognitive processing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the exposure to violence in different settings (school, community, home, and TV) and its relationship to some variables of the social-cognitive processing (hostile social perception, impulsivity, ability to anticipate the consequences of social behaviors and to select the appropriate means to achieve the goals of social behaviours) in a group of juveniles who assaulted their parents.
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Características familiares asociadas a violencia filio-parental en adolescentes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the association of family characteristics associated with child-to-parent aggressions in adolescents and found that low levels of affection and communication were associated with all forms of severe CPA.
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Behavioral problems and depressive symptomatology as predictors of child-to-parent violence

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined whether young offenders who had been charged for violence against their parents presented different psychological problems from youngsters charged with other types of offence and non-offenders.
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Violent and Prosocial Behavior by Adolescents toward Parents and Teachers in a Community Sample.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on violent and prosocial behaviors by adolescents toward parents and teachers, and the relation between such behaviors and adolescents' perceptions about the family and school environment.
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La violencia filio-parental: un análisis de sus claves

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors carried out a bibliometric review of qualitative analyses on the basis of documents and books from 1957 until 2011, mainly from countries such as Australia, Japan, Canada, New Zealand, France, USA or Spain, from which they intended to understand: what violence against parents is, the cycle of this kind of violence, characteristics of the families who suffer this violence, and characteristics of children who ill-treat.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, meta-analytic reviews of sex differences in aggression from real-world settings are described, covering self-reports, observations, peer reports, and teacher reports of overall direct, physical, and indirect aggression.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between growing up in a violent home and subsequently becoming part of a violent marital relationship and found that there is a weak-to-moderate relationship between being raised in an abusive family and becoming involved in violent marital relationships.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The findings from this study suggest that although close supportive relationships with parents and peers are related to adolescent self-esteem, these links are complex.
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